And you with a Bowie avatar...
The man's a god, I won't hear any different.
And you with a Bowie avatar...
A disaster with a particularly hot wash, and a whole generation of fashion atrocities was created...
Are they still performing together?
I saw them play in Santa Cruz about ten years ago and it was a pretty good show, wouldn't mind a chance to catch them again at some point.
Getting back to AL jackets, if their leather looks as bad in real life as in their pictures I don't feel bad for missing out on some of the sale jackets. Just not going to risk it no matter the price. Got a BK jacket in the queue instead.
Getting back to AL jackets, if their leather looks as bad in real life as in their pictures I don't feel bad for missing out on some of the sale jackets. Just not going to risk it no matter the price. Got a BK jacket in the queue instead.
All because of a photo of a 1970s pop group How much more Fedora Lounge can you get
Spoken like a true defender of empire. All I'll say is that every relationship has its ups and downs. You might be partially correct but even the grandest romances can lead to messy break ups!
I see where you're coming from with the whole Celtic revival thing. Yeah, it's true of course with the whole Iolo Morgannwg phenomenon and the invention of the Clan tartans and so on. Thing is, do people in these lands and from these culture self identify as being from Celtic nations? Yes. Does real Celtic history predate the revivals? Of course. Are there vibrant cultural structures such as political structures, languages, music and literature still extant? Yes! Does a modern conception of Celtic nationhood embrace and acknowledge these contradictions? Sure, just read 'When was Wales?' by Gwyn Alf Williams, it's all about how we've always been creating narratives around national identity since way before the 12th century! If you're seriously arguing that somehow Celtic identity was irreperably diluted by the Romans or whatever I can only retort that I live in the 21st century and that you should come on in, the water's fine!
Like a lot of these groups that split up, I guess one of them wants a solo career or something, it doesnt happen, so years later when we all want to watch our teen idols(Not necessarily the Rollers I may add) A member decides to re-form the group. Then another member does not want to join but feels the bands name was his as he was lead singer or whatever so starts his own band. We now may have: The Bay City Rollers, The Original Bay City Rollers and Les Mckeown's Bay City Rollers, all have members of the group in each one.
Now take the Platters, they have never been out of the limelight , though non of the original artistes that sang on their greatest hits are probably all dead, they are still going strong headed by? Your guess is as good as mine, the guy cleaning the toilets when 'Only You' was recorded
Easy to spot real 'Rollers' fans at a gig, all grey haired ladies around 50-55 waving tartan scarves.
Then I definitely cannot say for sure who I saw. Kind of tarnishes the memory a bit, but it was still a good time.
Actually You have no idea what I think about the one time British Empire. But I bet I know more about it than you having spent several years of my childhood living in a then British colony in Africa. At the time I just accepted it as normal but later in my teens I came to understand what empires do, which is to enrich themselves at the expense of the colonised. True for de facto as well as de jure empires incidentally. This was one of the main reasons why the Scots elite who were pushing for the Act of Union wanted to join with England of course. The Empire was hardly going by then but was clearly a coming thing, and the Scots who are canny businessmen knew they would do very well out of it and did, dominating many areas of commerce with their large trading houses.
There really is no such thing as the Celtic nations.
As I said before Celtic is really a language group and to a lesser extent a culture. No one knows how many Celts from their land by the Danube settled in the rest of Europe. But it can't have been many and their influence was much greater than their numbers because they were skilled metalworkers and took the secrets of smelting with them. Just like the Romans later whose numbers were relatively small in their Empire but who spread their language and culture out of all proportion to their numbers so did the Celts. Except it wasn't by conquest in their case but by knowledge. At one time Celtic languages were the most common in Europe but were superseded by conquest and immigration in later centuries and only survived on the western fringes.
So yes people can and do think of themselves as they wish and the history of countries is bent to political and nationalistic ends much more often than we like to think.
But the peoples of Europe in the bronze age who spoke Celtic languages were no more actually Celts in ethnicity than an ethnic Scot or Welshman is today. That's why I pointed out that Alba, later Scotland expanded into England in the ninth century and absorbed all those Sassanachs who became lowland Scots, and who now make up about half of the country. They are not Celts in any way at all and never adopted Gaelic or other Celtic cultural identifiers.
The revival of interest in and idea of the Celts as an actual living people came very largely from the legend of Ossian which was also hugely influential in continental Europe and helped fuel the romantic age. It was no surprise that this literary concoction came after the Act of Union as a reaction to it and it was more influential even than Walter Scott later in establishing many of the 'narratives of national identity' of which you wrote.
I've always believed that nationalism, that eighteenth century invention has a lot to answer for along with all the tunes and bunting which came with it. I mean the nationalism of the nation state which people did not identify with until then. People used to think of themselves as natives of their area and their loyalty was to that and their folk and kin. Their attachment to the land they lived in was that of the patros, the land of their birth and of their fathers. But nationalism in time became confused with and in many cases took over from simple patriotism.
I feel an attachment as we all do for the land of my birth and the " happy highway where I went and cannot come again." But I feel little attachment for an artificial construct of a nation state to which I must pay allegiance. Or to paraphrase Seamus Heaney my passport is burgundy. But it can be pink and mauve for all I care.
Actually You have no idea what I think about the one time British Empire. But I bet I know more about it than you having spent several years of my childhood living in a then British colony in Africa. At the time I just accepted it as normal but later in my teens I came to understand what empires do, which is to enrich themselves at the expense of the colonised. True for de facto as well as de jure empires incidentally. This was one of the main reasons why the Scots elite who were pushing for the Act of Union wanted to join with England of course. The Empire was hardly going by then but was clearly a coming thing, and the Scots who are canny businessmen knew they would do very well out of it and did, dominating many areas of commerce with their large trading houses.
Incidentally the other more pressing reason why they wanted to join with England was to pull their financial nuts out of the fire when their own attempt at an American colony failed leaving the country near bankrupt.
I don't think you do. There really is no such thing as the Celtic nations. As I said before Celtic is really a language group and to a lesser extent a culture. No one knows how many Celts from their land by the Danube settled in the rest of Europe. But it can't have been many and their influence was much greater than their numbers because they were skilled metalworkers and took the secrets of smelting with them. Just like the Romans later whose numbers were relatively small in their Empire but who spread their language and culture out of all proportion to their numbers so did the Celts. Except it wasn't by conquest in their case but by knowledge. At one time Celtic languages were the most common in Europe but were superseded by conquest and immigration in later centuries and only survived on the western fringes.
So yes people can and do think of themselves as they wish and the history of countries is bent to political and nationalistic ends much more often than we like to think. But the peoples of Europe in the bronze age who spoke Celtic languages were no more actually Celts in ethnicity than an ethnic Scot or Welshman is today. That's why I pointed out that Alba, later Scotland expanded into England in the ninth century and absorbed all those Sassanachs who became lowland Scots, and who now make up about half of the country. They are not Celts in any way at all and never adopted Gaelic or other Celtic cultural identifiers.
The revival of interest in and idea of the Celts as an actual living people came very largely from the legend of Ossian which was also hugely influential in continental Europe and helped fuel the romantic age. It was no surprise that this literary concoction came after the Act of Union as a reaction to it and it was more influential even than Walter Scott later in establishing many of the 'narratives of national identity' of which you wrote.
I've always believed that nationalism, that eighteenth century invention has a lot to answer for along with all the tunes and bunting which came with it. I mean the nationalism of the nation state which people did not identify with until then. People used to think of themselves as natives of their area and their loyalty was to that and their folk and kin. Their attachment to the land they lived in was that of the patros, the land of their birth and of their fathers. But nationalism in time became confused with and in many cases took over from simple patriotism.
I feel an attachment as we all do for the land of my birth and the " happy highway where I went and cannot come again." But I feel little attachment for an artificial construct of a nation state to which I must pay allegiance. Or to paraphrase Seamus Heaney my passport is burgundy. But it can be pink and mauve for all I care.
Yeah, I don't think the Irish, Scottish, Welsh and Manx members of the board will appreciate that. It's pretty rude.