Post by craydarr on Aug 23, 2020 9:27:12 GMT
Why bother to write this if you know nothing about the band and donโt like them??
Amazon review of Backbone ๐
And I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it I li-li-like it, li-li-like here we go, crapping all over the world.
This was SQ back in the days of flared jeans and outrageous hairdos, displaying their relentlessly repetitive bland three-chord songwriting. For those old-timers (I'm from a much younger generation) nostalgic about those foot-tapping, hip-thrusting days of yesteryear, here is SQ again in all its glory, doing what they've been doing for the past fifty years - repeating themselves.
I had heard with enthusiastic anticipation that, either by a desire to retire and enjoy the fruits of their dubious craft or conscious of the musical torment they were inflicting, they were planning to lay to rest their three-stringed guitars, once and for all. Sadly, it wasn't to be. Presumably, they had second thoughts and decided that by re-releasing one of their previous records, under a different title, there was still money to be made.
Later, when one of the band members passed away - possibly due to some undiagnosed music-related medical condition which impacted on his health - a glimmer of hope presented itself and all those who had endured their music and resorted to wearing earmuffs, could finally remove them and rejoice at the demise of the most annoying band in rock music history. Again, frustratingly it didn't happen, they just filled the vacancy and carried on.
Quite why a record company would want to release their records, is something I find baffling. Perhaps the band's leader is a good business man, in which case he deserves all the credit.
Considering that so many great bands have now disintegrated, for one reason or another, SQ being a mediocre one, should have ceased to exist a long time ago, having been musically deceiving their fans for decades.
Amazon review of Backbone ๐
And I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it I li-li-like it, li-li-like here we go, crapping all over the world.
This was SQ back in the days of flared jeans and outrageous hairdos, displaying their relentlessly repetitive bland three-chord songwriting. For those old-timers (I'm from a much younger generation) nostalgic about those foot-tapping, hip-thrusting days of yesteryear, here is SQ again in all its glory, doing what they've been doing for the past fifty years - repeating themselves.
I had heard with enthusiastic anticipation that, either by a desire to retire and enjoy the fruits of their dubious craft or conscious of the musical torment they were inflicting, they were planning to lay to rest their three-stringed guitars, once and for all. Sadly, it wasn't to be. Presumably, they had second thoughts and decided that by re-releasing one of their previous records, under a different title, there was still money to be made.
Later, when one of the band members passed away - possibly due to some undiagnosed music-related medical condition which impacted on his health - a glimmer of hope presented itself and all those who had endured their music and resorted to wearing earmuffs, could finally remove them and rejoice at the demise of the most annoying band in rock music history. Again, frustratingly it didn't happen, they just filled the vacancy and carried on.
Quite why a record company would want to release their records, is something I find baffling. Perhaps the band's leader is a good business man, in which case he deserves all the credit.
Considering that so many great bands have now disintegrated, for one reason or another, SQ being a mediocre one, should have ceased to exist a long time ago, having been musically deceiving their fans for decades.