1. Originally posted by stj0691[..]

    no. nick is!

    Juraj, I think you bring GC to a new level, the cool level

    Nick adds a drop of spam to not make it cool...


    Indeed. He just adds stuff to make fun of....and leaves our minds in the gutter. lol
  2. Originally posted by yuri31seems I need Acrobat now.......


    Let's all tell Nick not to be a spammer when he gets on!?
  3. Originally posted by stj0691[..]

    when will see you and youur girlfriend nate>?


    when we actually have a decent picture together. lol
  4. Originally posted by stj0691[..]

    Let's all tell Nick not to be a spammer when he gets on!?


    good idea....
  5. Mark, here are liner notes to It's Hard by the Who, in small doses at a time
  6. Originally posted by stj0691[..]

    no. nick is!

    Juraj, I think you bring GC to a new level, the cool level

    Nick adds a drop of spam to not make it cool...



    Couldn't say it better...Cool Gang Juraj! COOL GANG!
  7. Welcome to The Who's last studio album (to date) and certainly their most controversial. It's Hard received some rave reviews when it came out but quickly became their most reviled studio release and one of the biggest reasons why The Who didn't record another for 24 years. Before it was released, however, Pete Townshend didn't just promote the album, he was enthused about it as a revitalization of the band and there are Who fans (and I'll admit I'm one of them) who find this album very under-appreciated. It's Hard began under curious circumstances and it is impossible to properly approach the album without knowledge of both what was then happening in The Who and in the world at large.
  8. Originally posted by markp91[..]


    Couldn't say it better...Cool Gang Juraj! COOL GANG!


    I think I'm gonna form the LNC (Late Night Crew) for Myself, Steve, Nick and Jeremy....
  9. Originally posted by stj0691Mark, here are liner notes to It's Hard by the Who, in small doses at a time


    I'm listening...
  10. Originally posted by stj0691Welcome to The Who's last studio album (to date) and certainly their most controversial. It's Hard received some rave reviews when it came out but quickly became their most reviled studio release and one of the biggest reasons why The Who didn't record another for 24 years. Before it was released, however, Pete Townshend didn't just promote the album, he was enthused about it as a revitalization of the band and there are Who fans (and I'll admit I'm one of them) who find this album very under-appreciated. It's Hard began under curious circumstances and it is impossible to properly approach the album without knowledge of both what was then happening in The Who and in the world at large.


    Okay...nice opening lol...
  11. Originally posted by easports43[..]

    I think I'm gonna form the LNC (Late Night Crew) for Myself, Steve, Nick and Jeremy....


    I'll be the singer!
  12. Face Dances, The Who's previous album, had been commercially successful but was very disappointing for the group. Both Roger and Pete talked of the band being disengaged from the material and Pete was determined that it wouldn't happen with the next album. However, he had problems of his own to solve first. By the end of 1981 he was not only drinking heavily, but was also addicted to Ativan and sleeping pills and was freebasing cocaine mixed with heroin. When he went to his parents' home for Christmas holidays, he looked so close to death that they begged him to get help. Reuniting with his wife Karen, from whom he had been separated for the last two years, Pete flew to California to a clinic run by Meg Patterson. Here he underwent the same NeuroElectric Therapy that had helped Eric Clapton overcome his drug addiction. While he was there he sent word back to The Who that he wanted to return to work. Pete: "I managed to convince the guys in the band that I would stay alive if they allowed me to work with them again. After the Rainbow fiasco [the 1981 concert where Pete drank four bottles of brandy and got in a backstage fight with Roger], I had difficulty proving to Roger in particular that I was going to enjoy working with the Who, and that it was important to me that the band end properly, rather than end because of my fucking mental demise."



    When Pete returned from California in February, The Who were ready for him, having been rehearsing at producer Glyn Johns' house. "The band was working, they were active, they were writing. Roger was playing the guitar. If I had said right then and there, 'Listen chaps, I don't feel like making the record,' they looked as if they would have gone on and done something without me. And they weren't making any demonstrations to me, either. They were just doing it because they wanted to do it. It was really strange. I thought 'I'd really like to play with those guys.'"