Timestamps: 0:00: Master Of Ceremonies 2:08: In The Flesh? 5:03: The Thin Ice 8:05: Another Brick In The Wall Part One 12:43: The Happiest Days Of Our Lives 14:29: Another Brick In The Wall Part Two 21:08: Mother 1:25:43: In The Flesh
@@TheWorldmanOne I'm from the UK, and can hear him say it quite clearly. "Raring to go" is a term here (it might be elsewhere in the English-speaking world, too, but definitely in the UK).
The band was paid a very large amount of money by Dortmund and Mama Concert to put on the concerts in Dortmund. Considering the large debt that the band had after the recording of the album and 1980 tour, they really needed the money to survive. That’s why the production value of everything surrounding those shows are extraordinary, Mama Concert covered all the expenses and promoted it like crazy. I’d honestly go as far as to say that Dortmund is the only time that you can really tell that the band is having fun during the wall. No pressure whatsoever they did it as a one off thing (For 8 nights lol)
@@TheWorldmanOne Thanks for your reply. I've been trying to figure this one out for years, nobody seemed to know. BTW who exactly is Mama Concert, just curious.
@@AY-uf4oz If you're interested to learn more about anything and everything related to the wall, I'd highly recommend that you get Vernon Fitch book "Comfortably Numb: A History of "The Wall"" it's definitely worth a read. Regarding Mama Concerts, they were a distribution company responsible for arranging concerts all around west germany in the 70s and 80s.
@@TheWorldmanOne Thanks. Yes I'm interested in anything related to The Wall, as you may be able to tell by my logo. I consider it the greatest artistic work of my generation. I also just happened to be at the final Animals show at the Olympic Stadium in Montreal in 1977 with the infamous spitting incident, which was the genesis of The Wall. Although I wasn't aware of the incident until I read about it years later.
@@AY-uf4oz British and American Rock bands/acts have always been popular in Germany, which has - or at least had - one of the biggest music industries in the world during the 70s and 80s (probably 90s to the present day... especially as the country got a lot bigger from the early 90s. Maybe because Germany had the Berlin Wall at that time, maybe they thought it was poignant (especially with the album's message and the way the character Pink turns out)?
Incredible rendition of Another Brick Part 3 at 51:00
Funny Roger is not the same without Gilmour and vise versa 100% times better together
I agree 👍
Wie cool dass es alle drei Tage gibt
really love the argument between MC Atmos (Willi Thomzyck) and Roger before In The Flesh
Timestamps:
0:00: Master Of Ceremonies
2:08: In The Flesh?
5:03: The Thin Ice
8:05: Another Brick In The Wall Part One
12:43: The Happiest Days Of Our Lives
14:29: Another Brick In The Wall Part Two
21:08: Mother
1:25:43: In The Flesh
the version of young lust do you hear LOVEABLE DAVE statement?
Yep, that’s what Roger is saying “He’s ready to go, here he is! Our very own lovable Dave”, “Welcome to boogie boogie mhm”
@@TheWorldmanOne He says "he's raring to go", not "ready". "Raring to go" means he's very excited and very enthusiastic about the upcoming performance
@@raoulduke344 Fascinating! Is that based of the Numb book? Or just from your own opinion?
@@TheWorldmanOne I'm from the UK, and can hear him say it quite clearly. "Raring to go" is a term here (it might be elsewhere in the English-speaking world, too, but definitely in the UK).
when i first heard this i thought he was saying, "Unlovable Dave" ?? I probably misheard own for un
NYC, London and LA I can understand, but does anyone know why they chose Dortmund for the 4th venue to perform The Wall?
The band was paid a very large amount of money by Dortmund and Mama Concert to put on the concerts in Dortmund. Considering the large debt that the band had after the recording of the album and 1980 tour, they really needed the money to survive. That’s why the production value of everything surrounding those shows are extraordinary, Mama Concert covered all the expenses and promoted it like crazy.
I’d honestly go as far as to say that Dortmund is the only time that you can really tell that the band is having fun during the wall. No pressure whatsoever they did it as a one off thing (For 8 nights lol)
@@TheWorldmanOne Thanks for your reply. I've been trying to figure this one out for years, nobody seemed to know. BTW who exactly is Mama Concert, just curious.
@@AY-uf4oz If you're interested to learn more about anything and everything related to the wall, I'd highly recommend that you get Vernon Fitch book "Comfortably Numb: A History of "The Wall"" it's definitely worth a read.
Regarding Mama Concerts, they were a distribution company responsible for arranging concerts all around west germany in the 70s and 80s.
@@TheWorldmanOne Thanks. Yes I'm interested in anything related to The Wall, as you may be able to tell by my logo. I consider it the greatest artistic work of my generation. I also just happened to be at the final Animals show at the Olympic Stadium in Montreal in 1977 with the infamous spitting incident, which was the genesis of The Wall. Although I wasn't aware of the incident until I read about it years later.
@@AY-uf4oz British and American Rock bands/acts have always been popular in Germany, which has - or at least had - one of the biggest music industries in the world during the 70s and 80s (probably 90s to the present day... especially as the country got a lot bigger from the early 90s. Maybe because Germany had the Berlin Wall at that time, maybe they thought it was poignant (especially with the album's message and the way the character Pink turns out)?
David forgot lyrics in the first verse😅
Excelente, hay algún video ?????
Sadly not, maybe some time in the future!
1:25:28 Are there TWO MCs here?
mistake made in young lust
1:47:43 poor judge voice 😂
👍