agreed we dissagree on kiss. I didn't like them for the makeup for the record... perhaps that's why I'm still a fan? (not still in terms of recent music... still interms of old stuff)
boygeorge... yeah there were tons of ppul dressing like him and legions of cure fans dressing like whats his dick... crazy hair.
"killing an arab" -wow that was good stuff
I'm talking about the fans you didn't see checking them out. I guess there's no way to quantify that group, but whos to say his dress didn't limit his audience to those who would dress like that?
I guess you can say johns "newer look" was a look, but then so was everyones, even bruce and bob's. So if wearing tshirt n jeans is qualified as 'dressing up' then I guess I'm with you. Everyone must wear clothes! Hell I guess I'm in costume when I'm wearing whatever I wear. And to some extent that's true... I think that answer skirts the question of importance of dressing up. I would qualify dressing up as wearing something on stage that you wouldn't wear off stage. Something that would seem out of the ordinary, accept on stage. A costume. Something different than you just being yourself.
So I'm gonna revise my understanding of this topic to reflect the idea that if yer just wearing something you'd wear in everyday life... your not dressing UP. Even if you dress like a complete freak show in real life. That is you... and not a costume. So does this rule true in both theory and practice?
boygeorge... yeah there were tons of ppul dressing like him and legions of cure fans dressing like whats his dick... crazy hair.
"killing an arab" -wow that was good stuff
I'm talking about the fans you didn't see checking them out. I guess there's no way to quantify that group, but whos to say his dress didn't limit his audience to those who would dress like that?
I guess you can say johns "newer look" was a look, but then so was everyones, even bruce and bob's. So if wearing tshirt n jeans is qualified as 'dressing up' then I guess I'm with you. Everyone must wear clothes! Hell I guess I'm in costume when I'm wearing whatever I wear. And to some extent that's true... I think that answer skirts the question of importance of dressing up. I would qualify dressing up as wearing something on stage that you wouldn't wear off stage. Something that would seem out of the ordinary, accept on stage. A costume. Something different than you just being yourself.
So I'm gonna revise my understanding of this topic to reflect the idea that if yer just wearing something you'd wear in everyday life... your not dressing UP. Even if you dress like a complete freak show in real life. That is you... and not a costume. So does this rule true in both theory and practice?
http://www.myspace.com/mrmikevhisonepieceorchestra