Always and forever, thank you to Great Britain and the British people whose creativity, since the 1960s, has given the rest of the World hundreds of unique bands such as the Siouxsie And The Banshees and music of unparalleled beauty, quirkiness and atmosphere. What would our lives have been without British bands? Thank you from Sicily.
@@markthompson1819 I regret to say I agree. What happened I wonder? Is the "global culture" to blame or the Americanization of the British youth or what?
@@benedettobruno1669 it's partly the Americanisation of our culture; kids love their rappers even though the experience of black Americans bears little to no resemblance to the life experience of 99.9% of British youth. I'm not knowledgeable about rap but I believe we've actually managed to create a sub genre or two that better reflects life on our island. Another aspect is the digitalisation of music. You don't need to be able to play an instrument or be in a band any more. You can program a tune in your bedroom. Partly it's because youngsters have access to an ENORMOUS archive of great music from decades past. When I was a kid in the late 70's pop music and youth culture was less than 20 years old. Now it's over 60. There's less need to break new ground when there's so much old music to explore. It saddens me tbh. My 15 yr old son is a talented drummer but shows little interest in playing in a band.
@@markthompson1819 Tell me about it! And you should see Italian rappers! Ah! I miss the good times when singers didn't feel necessary to cover their entire bodies with tattoos or dress and act like some Black misfits from some U.S.A. neighbourhoods and play horrible music called Rap or like some Hispanic misfits migrated to the U.S.A. from South and Central America and play horrible music called Neo-Latin. God deliver the World from Rap and Neo-Latin as soon as possible. Please!
thanks for posting this. It was one of my all time favorite songs. I was very disappointed, though, when Siouxsie played at the California Hall in San Francisco (c. 1978/9?) with the Dead Kennedy's. Some drunk a..hole threw a beer can at her guitar player and the band walked off the stage only after a couple songs - last time they came to S.F.
@@theboomer61 That's the only good version. Not that there's anything wrong with this studio recording (maybe should have taken it at a slightly faster tempo) but the overdubbed version of Don Letts' Punk Rock Movie defeats the whole purpose of the project - a compliation of live performances of bands from an era before cameraphones when there was very little video coverage of the grassroots pub/club music scene. I wish Don Letts had carried on filming after the Roxy finished - maybe filmed the Ants (annoyingly Laurie Rae Chamberlain's film of them is silent).
Still us Antfans got our revenge - we've got the Jubilee white room video of Plastic Surgery (with Kenny Morris on drums!) - ua-cam.com/video/bvTgHum7xSw/v-deo.html - whereas the video of the Banshees doing Love In A Void from the same session is lost (except for the bits actually seen in Jubilee on the telly in the gang's flat).
@@kurtvanderbogarde8402 Do you know if the footage of the interview with Sioux and Severin where they mention Andy Czezowski at the end of the Punk Rock Movie is from the 23rd April gig, the day the Ants formed?
@@juveale29 Yes, it was the same night, but there's no Adam in those clips and none of the others as far as I can see (mind you we only have one good photo of Paul Flanagan and even that has a cymbal cutting across his face. )
On the dancing front, carcasses aren't known for being good dancers. Lol. If she didn't twitch like an electrocuted zombie her vocals wouldn't have the right harmonics for the theme.
I think thath Sid plays the bass before his drug adicction...he was not a great player...but.. he can play...the problem was the heroin ...he can't play and thath's the question : he isn't a good bass player. ...but ...heroin ???
The Queen 🖤🖤🖤🖤
Always and forever, thank you to Great Britain and the British people whose creativity, since the 1960s, has given the rest of the World hundreds of unique bands such as the Siouxsie And The Banshees and music of unparalleled beauty, quirkiness and atmosphere. What would our lives have been without British bands? Thank you from Sicily.
Sadly that creative spirit seems to be dead. Nothing interesting has come out of this island for 20 years.
@@markthompson1819 I regret to say I agree.
What happened I wonder? Is the "global culture" to blame or the Americanization of the British youth or what?
@@benedettobruno1669 it's partly the Americanisation of our culture; kids love their rappers even though the experience of black Americans bears little to no resemblance to the life experience of 99.9% of British youth. I'm not knowledgeable about rap but I believe we've actually managed to create a sub genre or two that better reflects life on our island.
Another aspect is the digitalisation of music. You don't need to be able to play an instrument or be in a band any more. You can program a tune in your bedroom.
Partly it's because youngsters have access to an ENORMOUS archive of great music from decades past. When I was a kid in the late 70's pop music and youth culture was less than 20 years old. Now it's over 60. There's less need to break new ground when there's so much old music to explore.
It saddens me tbh. My 15 yr old son is a talented drummer but shows little interest in playing in a band.
@@benedettobruno1669 I'm going to see this guy next week. He's worth keeping an eye on.
ua-cam.com/video/VFqhJyvly1g/v-deo.html
@@markthompson1819 Tell me about it! And you should see Italian rappers!
Ah! I miss the good times when singers didn't feel necessary to cover their entire bodies with tattoos or dress and act like some Black misfits from some U.S.A. neighbourhoods and play horrible music called Rap or like some Hispanic misfits migrated to the U.S.A. from South and Central America and play horrible music called Neo-Latin. God deliver the World from Rap and Neo-Latin as soon as possible. Please!
I loooove her unique vocal style and the straight banging beat and those sweet jangly guitar tones.
official God she so beautiful
amazing crunchy footage
IT WAS PURE PUNK MUSIC ! ❤
1977 !!! That was THE year.!
Essa é com certeza uma das melhores bandas da cena gótica de todo os tempos!
"Limblessly in Looooooooove "
thanks for posting this. It was one of my all time favorite songs. I was very disappointed, though, when Siouxsie played at the California Hall in San Francisco (c. 1978/9?) with the Dead Kennedy's. Some drunk a..hole threw a beer can at her guitar player and the band walked off the stage only after a couple songs - last time they came to S.F.
That sucks. SF did that to the Misfits as well, a few years later.
Clearly there must be a somewhat high percentage of disrispectful folks in san Francisco....
They never played SF again?
Ouvi o disco the scream no spotify,com certeza é o album mais pesado da banda!
O album The Scream é um excelente disco mostra a banda mais crua!
Splendid!
Great filmage !!!
hello, good channel and good videos
I wish I could be her 🖤
You are
It is worth seeking out this clip with the original nasty crap sound...
+Pat Rubbish That version is really good also.
@@theboomer61 That's the only good version. Not that there's anything wrong with this studio recording (maybe should have taken it at a slightly faster tempo) but the overdubbed version of Don Letts' Punk Rock Movie defeats the whole purpose of the project - a compliation of live performances of bands from an era before cameraphones when there was very little video coverage of the grassroots pub/club music scene.
I wish Don Letts had carried on filming after the Roxy finished - maybe filmed the Ants (annoyingly Laurie Rae Chamberlain's film of them is silent).
Still us Antfans got our revenge - we've got the Jubilee white room video of Plastic Surgery (with Kenny Morris on drums!) - ua-cam.com/video/bvTgHum7xSw/v-deo.html - whereas the video of the Banshees doing Love In A Void from the same session is lost (except for the bits actually seen in Jubilee on the telly in the gang's flat).
@@kurtvanderbogarde8402 Do you know if the footage of the interview with Sioux and Severin where they mention Andy Czezowski at the end of the Punk Rock Movie is from the 23rd April gig, the day the Ants formed?
@@juveale29 Yes, it was the same night, but there's no Adam in those clips and none of the others as far as I can see (mind you we only have one good photo of Paul Flanagan and even that has a cymbal cutting across his face. )
Siempre tuve la duda si los metaleros de Carcass se pusieron ese nombre por esta canción.
La estuve teniendo estos dias pero se me quita al ver que carcass significa cuerpo y la banda tiene una temática gore
Her stage presence got way better.
Her stage presence is this video was ahead of its time in 1977. The young Siouxsie rocks in this video.
Never ever faked!
Iconic image, makeup, hair, guaranteed. But on the dancing front, we can safely say she was not at the front of the queue.
On the dancing front, carcasses aren't known for being good dancers. Lol. If she didn't twitch like an electrocuted zombie her vocals wouldn't have the right harmonics for the theme.
LOL she invented dances in 1976-1977 that people still use today... its called punk rock and she is the queen.
1:09 C'est du playback. Dommage...
on s en fout c est bien quand meme
Wow.....interesting___
Is that Sid Vicious on drums?
oh wow, sweet! He left alright.
+Ruben .... Sidney wished he was that good......It was Kenny Morris.
The only instrument that useless junkie could play was a needle in his arm
There are rehearsal videos of the Pistols where Sid is on the beat and making the changes on time. You should fuck off and find them
He did play for Siouxsie at one point
I think thath Sid plays the bass before his drug adicction...he was not a great player...but.. he can play...the problem was the heroin ...he can't play and thath's the question : he isn't a good bass player. ...but ...heroin ???