[ ]      [ ]   [ ]
Log in above to post your comment
Egrey
(WASH, DC)
Posted: May 04, 2009 - 08:04
 

one from the vault!  wow, only on RP.

TheFriendlyCat
(BC)
Posted: Jan 29, 2009 - 16:42
 

 bigtwistee wrote:
The The?
Yes.
Yes?
No, The The.
Who?
No, not The Who, The The.
The what now?
I said The The.
Who?
Screw it, Its frikkin Robbie Robertson.
Wasn't he in The Band?
Which band?
THE Band.
Yes.
No, not Yes, The Band.
Do they sing August and September?
They sing all year round.
Isn't that a book by Ann Druit?
Yes.
Crypes, nevermind.
Nirvanna?
Whats on the radio?
TV.
 
{#Lol}  just made me like this song more!


sans
(Philly)
Posted: Sep 25, 2008 - 05:40
 

The The - August & September
Badly Drawn Boy - Logic Of A Friend
Gabriel Rios - Broad Daylight

minimalistic folk pop with pedestrian vocals.

Jack_Jefferson
(Columbus, OH)
Posted: Jul 08, 2008 - 06:23
 

bigtwistee wrote:
The The?
Yes.
Yes?
No, The The.
Who?
No, not The Who, The The.
The what now?
I said The The.
Who?
Screw it, Its frikkin Robbie Robertson.
Wasn't he in The Band?
Which band?
THE Band.
Yes.
No, not Yes, The Band.
Do they sing August and September?
They sing all year round.
Isn't that a book by Ann Druit?
Yes.
Crypes, nevermind.
Nirvanna?
Whats on the radio?
TV.



arserocket
(Way down South West Scotland near boredom)
Posted: Jul 08, 2008 - 06:23
 

I think he's making what you technically call 'a meal of it'
amblemourne
(Snow in April)
Posted: Jun 22, 2008 - 11:48
 

Exceedimgly so.

crap.
AliGator
(Hiding from the Wedding-Industrial Complex)
Posted: Jun 22, 2008 - 11:43
 

bigtwistee wrote:
The The?
Yes.
Yes?
No, The The.
Who?
No, not The Who, The The.
The what now?
I said The The.
Who?
Screw it, Its frikkin Robbie Robertson.
Wasn't he in The Band?
Which band?
THE Band.
Yes.
No, not Yes, The Band.
Do they sing August and September?
They sing all year round.
Isn't that a book by Ann Druit?
Yes.
Crypes, nevermind.
Nirvanna?
Whats on the radio?
TV.



amblemourne
(Snow in April)
Posted: Jun 22, 2008 - 11:39
 

I guess you have to "be there" to enjoy crap like this. There is nothing there. Ack.
prickelpit96
(Hannover, Germany)
Posted: Mar 04, 2008 - 06:49
 

burdell wrote:
Perfection. Not one thing could possibly improve this song. (Nearly a perfect album too).


Yes, you're totally right.

Btw: I wish it'd be August now...
chasech5
(East Lansing, MI)
Posted: Dec 16, 2007 - 16:52
 

Quircky little tune. Like the instrumentation. Not sure about the vocals yet. A 6 for now.
burdell
Posted: Dec 16, 2007 - 16:50
 

Perfection. Not one thing could possibly improve this song. (Nearly a perfect album too).
Shimmer
(Bethesda, MD)
Posted: Nov 15, 2007 - 07:12
 

No momentum whatsoever.
Arianrhod
Posted: Sep 13, 2007 - 12:42
 

bigtwistee
You're a stouge
superflyLD
(Boston, MA)
Posted: Sep 13, 2007 - 12:40
 

bigtwistee wrote:
The The?
Yes.
Yes?
No, The The.
Who?
No, not The Who, The The.
The what now?
I said The The.
Who?
Screw it, Its frikkin Robbie Robertson.
Wasn't he in The Band?
Which band?
THE Band.
Yes.
No, not Yes, The Band.
Do they sing August and September?
They sing all year round.
Isn't that a book by Ann Druit?
Yes.
Crypes, nevermind.
Nirvanna?
Whats on the radio?
TV.



lattalo
(Montana)
Posted: Sep 13, 2007 - 12:39
 

Yeah, Uncertain Smile!!!!!!!!!
stevetheshoe
(wayfaraway)
Posted: Sep 13, 2007 - 12:37
 

An absolutely great album.
japanmoran
(Colorado Springs, CO)
Posted: Aug 28, 2007 - 18:54
 

Helps recall some parts of my past that I had forgotten - this is a good thing, most of the time.
bigtwistee
(Native Texican)
Posted: Jul 12, 2007 - 14:39
 

The The?
Yes.
Yes?
No, The The.
Who?
No, not The Who, The The.
The what now?
I said The The.
Who?
Screw it, Its frikkin Robbie Robertson.
Wasn't he in The Band?
Which band?
THE Band.
Yes.
No, not Yes, The Band.
Do they sing August and September?
They sing all year round.
Isn't that a book by Ann Druit?
Yes.
Crypes, nevermind.
Nirvanna?
Whats on the radio?
TV.
Raechel
Posted: Jul 12, 2007 - 14:14
 

heyjoe3577 wrote:


And yet you seem to have remarked on it....hmmmm.


ha! lol
prickelpit96
(Hannover, Germany)
Posted: Jun 11, 2007 - 04:57
 

Yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees! Thank you, Bill!
heyjoe3577
(Seattle)
Posted: May 10, 2007 - 19:26
 

Hannio wrote:
What a totally unremarkable song.


And yet you seem to have remarked on it....hmmmm.
Hannio
(Austin, TX)
Posted: Apr 09, 2007 - 06:11
 

What a totally unremarkable song.
cathenley
(Santa Maria, CA)
Posted: Mar 08, 2007 - 23:53
 


MojoJojo
(Indianapolis, IN USA)
Posted: Jan 22, 2007 - 08:17
 

Dragonfly_Launch wrote:
This song may have made my night.


By all means keep us posted.
Dragonfly_Launch
(Conway, Ar)
Posted: Jan 07, 2007 - 17:57
 

This song may have made my night.
rajakhana
Posted: Dec 09, 2006 - 16:51
 

Although I hate this song as it Perfectly describes my current lovelife, at the same time I've had it in my head constantly for the past few days and love it indescribably. Hmmm... I feel the exact same way about a particular person
phakister
(spain)
Posted: Nov 25, 2006 - 01:57
 


WonderLizard
(2,755.46 mi. due east of Paradise)
Posted: Nov 10, 2006 - 11:48
 

bob789 wrote:


Did you paste all that from someplace or just have too much coffee!!


It's a redacted paste from Matt Johnson's bio on www.thethe.com. Still, maybe the caffiene did it...
eastcoast
Posted: Nov 10, 2006 - 11:42
 

not too bad
Paul_in_Australia
(Melbourne)
Posted: Oct 12, 2006 - 05:45
 

Glad to see SmackDaddy is fighting against the proliferation of paragraphs that threaten the very survival of our species. Rage on!

SmackDaddy wrote:
It is often said that Matt Johnson’s absences between projects are longer than most band’s entire careers. It is probably true. Through line up changes, music business battles, phases of hedonism and madness, banned works, lost albums, relationship schisms and exile, Johnson has never shied from his vocation: testifying to the dark truths of our times and exploring the inner corridors of the heart. Not a single cheap shot or easy ride. After all this time, it’s starting to make sense. A fan of Dylan, Lennon, and Hank Williams, a father and a seeker, Matt Johnson is a proper, living national treasure. Although he was a couple of years too young to be hit by the full impact of UK punk his urge to make music was more a matter of inner demons than surrounding scenes. The son of publicans who used to promote gigs at their pub and in dance halls across the East End of London he grew up with John Lee Hooker, The Kinks and The Small Faces, amongst others, dropping by his parent’s hostelry. He began performing in his own band, Roadstar, at the age of 11. By 17, he had placed an advertisement in the NME to recruit members to his earliest version of The The, that read ; “Influences; The Residents, Syd Barrett, Throbbing Gristle, Velvet Underground.” They made their debut as a prototype electronic duo at London’s Africa Centre on May 11th 1979 and began playing shows with many of the most important bands of that era such as Cabaret Voltaire, The Birthday Party, Wire, This Heat, DAF, before clawing their way onto indie labels 4AD and Some Bizarre, the former releasing a 1981 debut “Burning Blue Soul” as Matt Johnson. Within two years, Matt’s nom-de-studio, TheThe would release the most critically-acclaimed album of the year, 1983’s synth-noir classic “Soul Mining”on CBS records. A further three years along Johnson’s journey into the heart’s darkness, he’d be risking death, strapped to a metal caged chair on top of a boat on the Amazon for “Infected”” the movie. Charting the limits of the soul within a pop career, while surrounded by big business and cynical 80’s music, was never going to be a smooth ride, but Johnson had a dedication that bordered on insanity. Behind the crafted heart searching on the singles collection “45 rpm “ lies an epic story. Studio psychosis in New York and Hunter Thompson-style road trips with manager Stevo lie behind the recording of early singles “Uncertain Smile” and “Perfect”. The mammoth 1986 “Infected” album project- which led to The The breaking through commercially with singles like “Sweet Bird Of Truth” and “Heartland” and the duet with Neneh Cherry on “Slow Train To Dawn” also saw Johnson hanging with Tom Waits in New York, and heading for personal meltdown, filming the stunt-filled, groundbreaking long form video in South America. No phase of The The’s progress has been without drama to match the intensity on record. By the time of the globally railing “Mind Bomb” album of 1989 - with its banned religious war-alerting single “Armageddon Days”- Johnson was pushing engineers and producers towards nervous breakdowns while mind-surfing on meditation, grape diets and magic mushroom tea. Controversially, he recruited Irish singer/songwriter Sinead O’Connor and The Smiths’ guitar ace Johnny Marr to join the band and toured the world, topping off with three wild nights at London’s Royal Albert Hall. The evolution of Johnson’s writing is tightly bound with his personal odyssey. The beautiful singles from 93’s UK No 2 hit album “Dusk” – “Love Is Stronger Than Death” and “Slow Emotion Replay” – are shaded by family bereavements. Having shipped out to New York, preferring to conduct from afar his ongoing tussle with the meaning of Britishness, he pulled off a vindicatory feat, covering Hank Williams songs on 1995’s “Hanky Panky” (including ‘45’s stomping “I Saw The Light” single). It was voted one of the country albums of the year in the US. The refusal to accept that politics, economics and religion are too ‘heavy’ for mere pop music has led to many a misperception about Johnson. His acerbic insight was regularly seen as presumptuous. However, against the recent tidal wave of music as blank noise ’45rpm’ reveals him as a precious, threatened species. After years of being regarded as overzealous due to the desire to talk about globalisation, environmentalism and religious extremism, (both in song and interview) Johnson has entered the new century with a back catalogue of lyrics more in tune with recent events than anyone. Concerns of country and planet do not, however, dominate on ’45rpm’. There is as much there about sex and city, relationships from a woman’s eye view (“DecemberSunlight”). Few who recall the song from the 80s, and many who will discover it in the 2000s, will be able to resist a soul-shiver as the words from ‘This Is The Day’ touch a shared raw nerve of hope and frustration: “This is the day your life will surely change/This is the day when things fall into place”. Roger Morton

horstman
Posted: Sep 27, 2006 - 13:49
 

SmackDaddy wrote:
It is often said that Matt Johnson’s absences between projects are longer than most band’s entire careers. It is probably true. Through line up changes, music business battles, phases of hedonism and madness, banned works, lost albums, relationship schisms and exile, Johnson has never shied from his vocation: testifying to the dark truths of our times and exploring the inner corridors of the heart. Not a single cheap shot or easy ride. After all this time, it’s starting to make sense. A fan of Dylan, Lennon, and Hank Williams, a father and a seeker, Matt Johnson is a proper, living national treasure. Although he was a couple of years too young to be hit by the full impact of UK punk his urge to make music was more a matter of inner demons than surrounding scenes. The son of publicans who used to promote gigs at their pub and in dance halls across the East End of London he grew up with John Lee Hooker, The Kinks and The Small Faces, amongst others, dropping by his parent’s hostelry. He began performing in his own band, Roadstar, at the age of 11. By 17, he had placed an advertisement in the NME to recruit members to his earliest version of The The, that read ; “Influences; The Residents, Syd Barrett, Throbbing Gristle, Velvet Underground.” They made their debut as a prototype electronic duo at London’s Africa Centre on May 11th 1979 and began playing shows with many of the most important bands of that era such as Cabaret Voltaire, The Birthday Party, Wire, This Heat, DAF, before clawing their way onto indie labels 4AD and Some Bizarre, the former releasing a 1981 debut “Burning Blue Soul” as Matt Johnson. Within two years, Matt’s nom-de-studio, TheThe would release the most critically-acclaimed album of the year, 1983’s synth-noir classic “Soul Mining”on CBS records. A further three years along Johnson’s journey into the heart’s darkness, he’d be risking death, strapped to a metal caged chair on top of a boat on the Amazon for “Infected”” the movie. Charting the limits of the soul within a pop career, while surrounded by big business and cynical 80’s music, was never going to be a smooth ride, but Johnson had a dedication that bordered on insanity. Behind the crafted heart searching on the singles collection “45 rpm “ lies an epic story. Studio psychosis in New York and Hunter Thompson-style road trips with manager Stevo lie behind the recording of early singles “Uncertain Smile” and “Perfect”. The mammoth 1986 “Infected” album project- which led to The The breaking through commercially with singles like “Sweet Bird Of Truth” and “Heartland” and the duet with Neneh Cherry on “Slow Train To Dawn” also saw Johnson hanging with Tom Waits in New York, and heading for personal meltdown, filming the stunt-filled, groundbreaking long form video in South America. No phase of The The’s progress has been without drama to match the intensity on record. By the time of the globally railing “Mind Bomb” album of 1989 - with its banned religious war-alerting single “Armageddon Days”- Johnson was pushing engineers and producers towards nervous breakdowns while mind-surfing on meditation, grape diets and magic mushroom tea. Controversially, he recruited Irish singer/songwriter Sinead O’Connor and The Smiths’ guitar ace Johnny Marr to join the band and toured the world, topping off with three wild nights at London’s Royal Albert Hall. The evolution of Johnson’s writing is tightly bound with his personal odyssey. The beautiful singles from 93’s UK No 2 hit album “Dusk” – “Love Is Stronger Than Death” and “Slow Emotion Replay” – are shaded by family bereavements. Having shipped out to New York, preferring to conduct from afar his ongoing tussle with the meaning of Britishness, he pulled off a vindicatory feat, covering Hank Williams songs on 1995’s “Hanky Panky” (including ‘45’s stomping “I Saw The Light” single). It was voted one of the country albums of the year in the US. The refusal to accept that politics, economics and religion are too ‘heavy’ for mere pop music has led to many a misperception about Johnson. His acerbic insight was regularly seen as presumptuous. However, against the recent tidal wave of music as blank noise ’45rpm’ reveals him as a precious, threatened species. After years of being regarded as overzealous due to the desire to talk about globalisation, environmentalism and religious extremism, (both in song and interview) Johnson has entered the new century with a back catalogue of lyrics more in tune with recent events than anyone. Concerns of country and planet do not, however, dominate on ’45rpm’. There is as much there about sex and city, relationships from a woman’s eye view (“DecemberSunlight”). Few who recall the song from the 80s, and many who will discover it in the 2000s, will be able to resist a soul-shiver as the words from ‘This Is The Day’ touch a shared raw nerve of hope and frustration: “This is the day your life will surely change/This is the day when things fall into place”. Roger Morton


Surely the longest post ever on RP? Does Smackdaddy really think we have time to read through all that? Does he even think we care?
Waybo
(Northern California)
Posted: Aug 14, 2006 - 17:09
 

Great song, amazing album. 10.

Like a lot of people I originally got into The The with Soul Mining. I've bought the rest of the albums, and each was totally different than the last. Mind Bomb was the first with Johnny Marr, who helped add a new dimension. I missed the Soul Mining sound (and will never tire of that album) but loved Mind Bomb almost more, but in a completely different way.
phillips
(a beach near you)
Posted: Jun 02, 2006 - 12:18
 

sounds like Happy Mondays a little bit... but much better :-)
bob789
Posted: May 04, 2006 - 08:14
 

SmackDaddy wrote:
It is often said .... frustration: “This is the day your life will surely change/This is the day when things fall into place”. Roger Morton


Did you paste all that from someplace or just have too much coffee!!
SmackDaddy
Posted: Apr 19, 2006 - 18:42
 

It is often said that Matt Johnson’s absences between projects are longer than most band’s entire careers. It is probably true. Through line up changes, music business battles, phases of hedonism and madness, banned works, lost albums, relationship schisms and exile, Johnson has never shied from his vocation: testifying to the dark truths of our times and exploring the inner corridors of the heart. Not a single cheap shot or easy ride. After all this time, it’s starting to make sense. A fan of Dylan, Lennon, and Hank Williams, a father and a seeker, Matt Johnson is a proper, living national treasure. Although he was a couple of years too young to be hit by the full impact of UK punk his urge to make music was more a matter of inner demons than surrounding scenes. The son of publicans who used to promote gigs at their pub and in dance halls across the East End of London he grew up with John Lee Hooker, The Kinks and The Small Faces, amongst others, dropping by his parent’s hostelry. He began performing in his own band, Roadstar, at the age of 11. By 17, he had placed an advertisement in the NME to recruit members to his earliest version of The The, that read ; “Influences; The Residents, Syd Barrett, Throbbing Gristle, Velvet Underground.” They made their debut as a prototype electronic duo at London’s Africa Centre on May 11th 1979 and began playing shows with many of the most important bands of that era such as Cabaret Voltaire, The Birthday Party, Wire, This Heat, DAF, before clawing their way onto indie labels 4AD and Some Bizarre, the former releasing a 1981 debut “Burning Blue Soul” as Matt Johnson. Within two years, Matt’s nom-de-studio, TheThe would release the most critically-acclaimed album of the year, 1983’s synth-noir classic “Soul Mining”on CBS records. A further three years along Johnson’s journey into the heart’s darkness, he’d be risking death, strapped to a metal caged chair on top of a boat on the Amazon for “Infected”” the movie. Charting the limits of the soul within a pop career, while surrounded by big business and cynical 80’s music, was never going to be a smooth ride, but Johnson had a dedication that bordered on insanity. Behind the crafted heart searching on the singles collection “45 rpm “ lies an epic story. Studio psychosis in New York and Hunter Thompson-style road trips with manager Stevo lie behind the recording of early singles “Uncertain Smile” and “Perfect”. The mammoth 1986 “Infected” album project- which led to The The breaking through commercially with singles like “Sweet Bird Of Truth” and “Heartland” and the duet with Neneh Cherry on “Slow Train To Dawn” also saw Johnson hanging with Tom Waits in New York, and heading for personal meltdown, filming the stunt-filled, groundbreaking long form video in South America. No phase of The The’s progress has been without drama to match the intensity on record. By the time of the globally railing “Mind Bomb” album of 1989 - with its banned religious war-alerting single “Armageddon Days”- Johnson was pushing engineers and producers towards nervous breakdowns while mind-surfing on meditation, grape diets and magic mushroom tea. Controversially, he recruited Irish singer/songwriter Sinead O’Connor and The Smiths’ guitar ace Johnny Marr to join the band and toured the world, topping off with three wild nights at London’s Royal Albert Hall. The evolution of Johnson’s writing is tightly bound with his personal odyssey. The beautiful singles from 93’s UK No 2 hit album “Dusk” – “Love Is Stronger Than Death” and “Slow Emotion Replay” – are shaded by family bereavements. Having shipped out to New York, preferring to conduct from afar his ongoing tussle with the meaning of Britishness, he pulled off a vindicatory feat, covering Hank Williams songs on 1995’s “Hanky Panky” (including ‘45’s stomping “I Saw The Light” single). It was voted one of the country albums of the year in the US. The refusal to accept that politics, economics and religion are too ‘heavy’ for mere pop music has led to many a misperception about Johnson. His acerbic insight was regularly seen as presumptuous. However, against the recent tidal wave of music as blank noise ’45rpm’ reveals him as a precious, threatened species. After years of being regarded as overzealous due to the desire to talk about globalisation, environmentalism and religious extremism, (both in song and interview) Johnson has entered the new century with a back catalogue of lyrics more in tune with recent events than anyone. Concerns of country and planet do not, however, dominate on ’45rpm’. There is as much there about sex and city, relationships from a woman’s eye view (“DecemberSunlight”). Few who recall the song from the 80s, and many who will discover it in the 2000s, will be able to resist a soul-shiver as the words from ‘This Is The Day’ touch a shared raw nerve of hope and frustration: “This is the day your life will surely change/This is the day when things fall into place”. Roger Morton
higado
(españa)
Posted: Nov 24, 2005 - 10:21
 

outstanding, remaind me my time in LA tks RP
plutodazed
(Out there on Pluto...)
Posted: Nov 09, 2005 - 18:42
 

This song is too interesting to just brush off as trash. Although it's not a top-rater, it is very good--aand so are the comments from the zealous fans.
Well, off to Pluto...
Akaiila
(London, UK)
Posted: Oct 26, 2005 - 04:17
 

Good memories, good times. Fantastic!
lixy
Posted: Aug 28, 2005 - 03:46
 

Wonderful !!!
pilgrim
(Terra Incognito, OR)
Posted: Jul 14, 2005 - 16:49
 

i dunno if there is a perfect album for me, but this is as close as it gets. Everything on it is a solid 9 or 10.
runchadrun
(Granada Hills, CA)
Posted: May 31, 2005 - 14:15
 

It's $10 Tuesday and just after Bill made the plug to contribute, he played this song.

How could I not contribute?
drd
Posted: Apr 17, 2005 - 22:23
 

Lyrics hit my soul like a fall from heaven AND and a leap out of hell. Extraordinary.
japanmoran
(Colorado Springs, CO)
Posted: Mar 04, 2005 - 11:48
 

Whoa haven't heard this song since high school.
neuhofer
(Manitoba, Canada)
Posted: Feb 17, 2005 - 18:02
 

The The, that is Matt Johnson, is, in my humble opinion, one of THE (he, he) best song writers in current pop music. All of his stuff is really solid. Solid song writing, thoughtful lyrics and his later albums are very well produced. I admit that some of his earlier work is not as approachable (burning blue soul).

First got to know this band by listening to Soul Mining. I was in the right frame of mind in those teenage years, sitting on sunny, warm afternoons cranking this album out - I felt like the music really was "soul mining."

Seen them live once in a venue that was pretty much empty - too bad for the band, great for us!


RichardPrins
(earth.ca)
Posted: Jan 19, 2005 - 06:32
 

What kind of man was I?
Who would sacrifice your happiness to satisfy his pride?
What kind of man was I?
Who would delay your destiny to appease his tiny mind?

mread
(W117°11.388' N32°54.504')
Posted: Jan 04, 2005 - 13:13
 

Love The The, but this is not among their better songs.
gregorbill
(PDX)
Posted: Dec 20, 2004 - 17:34
 

Can never get enough of The The. Easily my favorite artist.
Darkmatter
(Sweden)
Posted: Nov 21, 2004 - 05:00
 

Very odd. Sounds like a mix between Lambchop and Nick Cave to me - in a good way, that is! :D
snurfer
(Silesia, Poland)
Posted: Nov 06, 2004 - 10:22
 

First part is different than mind bomb album, but in a second part (What kind of man...Was I...) there's no other way: Matt Johnson is genious singer/writer....
I love that song :)
joempie
Posted: Nov 06, 2004 - 10:01