ClassicVibes Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 Did anyone just catch Dave's performance?Ā Genuinely speechless. Amazing.Ā 2 Quote
GisserD Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 Yep. The graphics on the piano were great! 2 Quote
Mudpup Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 48 minutes ago, ClassicVibes said: Did anyone just catch Dave's performance?Ā Genuinely speechless. Amazing.Ā Dave Eilish???? Quote
Lozz196 Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 43 minutes ago, ClassicVibes said: Did anyone just catch Dave's performance?Ā Genuinely speechless. Amazing.Ā I thought his piano playing was great. I wasnāt that keen on the lyrical content at first (not through dislike or prejudice, from not having had the experiences mentioned)Ā then halfway through realised what he is doing is exactly what the music I love, punk did - pointing out inequalities and injustices,Ā at that point I thought well done. But I still thought the piano playing was the best part of his performance. 3 Quote
Clarky Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 (edited) I agree. I am rarely grabbed by rap but that was an amazing and powerful performance. So much so that I rewound it immediately and watched it again Edited February 18, 2020 by Clarky 2 Quote
Cuzzie Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 Dave is great, fantastic artist @Lozz196Ā you have put it exactly right, rap when done right can be exactly like punk in its principles. Without getting too heavy, you go back to the origins and using samples etc. To make beats, guys like grandmaster flash, itās a protest to make music. They could not afford real instruments, so broke down beats and samples. NWA and their song F the police, all about brutality and inequality. Dave is relevant, these problems are out there, itās not that all people are bad, but you probably donāt realise because I would wager most people on here are moderate, and see no problems amongst people of different cultures and races. Anyway, enough heavy stuff. Great performance, good to see british rap/grimeĀ getting more to the front 2 Quote
ClassicVibes Posted February 18, 2020 Author Posted February 18, 2020 I'm sure a better quality version will appear tomorrow but until then:Ā Ā 3 Quote
Cato Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 Powerful performance. I'm guessing he'll get a few negative headlines regarding the political elements of the song in the press tomorrow. 2 Quote
BrunoBass Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 30 minutes ago, Cuzzie said: Dave is great, fantastic artist @Lozz196Ā you have put it exactly right, rap when done right can be exactly like punk in its principles. Great performance, good to see british rap/grimeĀ getting more to the front Couldnāt agreed more. 1 Quote
BreadBin Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 5 minutes ago, Cato said: Powerful performance. I'm guessing he'll get a few negative headlines regarding the political elements of the song in the press tomorrow. Fcuk 'em, he had every right to say them. Too many people complain about modern music having no depth and meaning but that was a brilliant, stirring performance with a real point to it.Ā 7 Quote
Cuzzie Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 14 minutes ago, Cato said: Powerful performance. I'm guessing he'll get a few negative headlines regarding the political elements of the song in the press tomorrow. Probably - Pah to the press 2 Quote
ambient Posted February 18, 2020 Posted February 18, 2020 28 minutes ago, BreadBin said: Fcuk 'em, he had every right to say them. Too many people complain about modern music having no depth and meaning but that was a brilliant, stirring performance with a real point to it.Ā Ā 24 minutes ago, Cuzzie said: Probably - Pah to the press Iām guessing the daily heil will be leading the way in condemning him. 1 Quote
Cuzzie Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 Dave aside - what struck was the amount of talent Britain has, we should be proud - some very decent artists out there. Celeste was at her haunting voicedĀ best Ā Quote
GisserD Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 (edited) Dave totally nailed it! really quite amazing performance. Edited February 19, 2020 by GisserD 1 Quote
bassace Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 They werenāt whizzed, they were whizzed. Whatās wrong with whizzed in grown up company FFS? Quote
Barking Spiders Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 I appreciate Dave and Stormzy have their own takeĀ on rapĀ and theirĀ messages but for meĀ London/English accentsĀ don't work. Think I'll stick with Compton and Brooklyn.Ā 1 Quote
Cuzzie Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 (edited) 47 minutes ago, Barking Spiders said: I appreciate Dave and Stormzy have their own takeĀ on rapĀ and theirĀ messages but for meĀ London/English accentsĀ don't work. Think I'll stick with Compton and Brooklyn.Ā Personal preferences aside, my view is that the major exposure to rap is from US rap be it East vs West coast, but real hip hop probably died in 1996 or around then, with only the odd flash here and there. For too long british rap was held back because of under investment, but also wanting/needing to sound like US rappers to be able to sell, and then getting chastised for not sounding british, then if they sounded british, itās not like US rap! Grime is not rap, itās itās own genre and way and is moving away and being recognised on its own which is a good thing IMO. Across the genres itās not always the best ārappersā that succeed I can name a bucket load that didnāt ascend as high as they should, BUT....... the best speaking vocalists or rappers that have an impact are also orators, case in point Zak De La Roche of RATM - not a rapper but an orator, much like Dave has done here, thatās a profound impact. Edited February 19, 2020 by Cuzzie Quote
Owen Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 2 hours ago, GisserD said: Dave totally nailed it! really quite amazing performance. On all fronts. Why is it left to musicians to get this stuff heard? 1 Quote
Barking Spiders Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 1 hour ago, Cuzzie said: Personal preferences aside, my view is that the major exposure to rap is from US rap be it East vs West coast, but real hip hop probably died in 1996 or around then, with only the odd flash here and there. Yep, can't say I care for mostĀ rap/hip hop acts thatĀ have emerged since the mid 90s. For me there's only been one decent act so far thisĀ millennium andĀ that's Run The Jewels., who have a line in anti-capitalism 1 Quote
Davo-London Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 There's too much hatred in this world.Ā I'm not sure this helps. Peace Davo Quote
Lozz196 Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 2 hours ago, owen said: On all fronts. Why is it left to musicians to get this stuff heard? I think itās due to both that for one they usually come from the backgrounds described so itās personalĀ but also that the musical platform gives the opportunity to air saidĀ views to a wide audience. Going back to my punk analogy Iām sure there were many disaffected youths around before The Sex Pistols/Clash/SLFĀ raised their voices, they just voiced what was important at the time to said youth. Quote
Beedster Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 2 hours ago, owen said: On all fronts. Why is it left to musicians to get this stuff heard? Itās been their role since Ancient GreeceĀ Quote
BreadBin Posted February 19, 2020 Posted February 19, 2020 Musicians and comedians are the social and political commentators today.Ā Quote
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