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Messages - Mack the finger

#31
GAA Discussion / Re: Latest Scores
October 18, 2009, 04:56:04 PM
Ogs ahead 6 to 4
#32
GAA Discussion / Re: Latest Scores
October 18, 2009, 04:50:32 PM
Ogs 5 Harps 4
#33
GAA Discussion / Re: Latest Scores
October 18, 2009, 04:40:48 PM
Quote from: Oraisteach on October 18, 2009, 04:38:18 PM
Cant get FIVEFM, is any other station carrying the Armagh game

Wouldn't work for me either. Try http://radiotime.com/station/s_67861/Five_FM_1005.aspx
#34
GAA Discussion / Re: Latest Scores
October 18, 2009, 04:38:33 PM
4 4 Harps and ogs at halftime
#35
Armagh / Re: Armagh Club football & hurling
October 11, 2009, 09:39:59 PM
Quote from: Carbery on October 11, 2009, 06:52:53 PM
I know that Armagh Harps and Pearse Og play in the senior final, but could anyone tell if the Intermediate and Junior finals have taken place.
If so who were the winners?

Junior championship Belleek  2-6 0-12 Shane O Neills   
#36
A joke of a process. The appointment of Paddy o'Rourke only verifies how
incompetent the county board have become.
#37
Very poor tonight. Was hoping those pushing for a place
would make a case. Very few showed. Dossena very
poor. Kyrgiakos strong in the tackle but
little else. Are there no young lads more deserving of a
place than Kyrgiakos? Pains me to say, but Agger for Carra.
Aurelio no answer on the left.
Masdch complaining too much and looks lost without Alonso.
Ngog ahowed a good touch and took his goal well.
Whatever money is offered, I'd take it for Babel.
Too many games are hard to watch; this was another.
#38
GAA Discussion / Re: Kerry v Cork All Ireland Final 2009
September 21, 2009, 05:38:10 PM
Quote from: botman on September 21, 2009, 10:32:38 AM
Quote from: Mack the finger on September 20, 2009, 08:33:19 PM
Took a friend from Australia to the match.
Everytime the big screen flashed, she asked if all Cork people were black!

In fairness your friend sounds kind of silly. Like she could have looked around and saw plenty of people in Cork jersey's who were white. I think around 25,000 Cork people went.

Of course she noticed. She just found it odd that the Cameras seemed determined to pick
out every person in a cork jersey that wasn't white. Guess with a 'worldwide' audience RTE
wanted to show how multicultural we've become.
#39
GAA Discussion / Re: Kerry v Cork All Ireland Final 2009
September 20, 2009, 08:33:19 PM
Delighted for Armagh Minors, came good when it mattered most.
Cork kicked themselves out of it second half, fair play to Kerry.
Best team is that who takes their scores.

Lucky enough to have been at both finals.
Hurling a winner in terms of skill.
How many fouls in the football?

Took a friend from Australia to the match.
Everytime the big screen flashed, she asked if all Cork people were black!
#40
Shakey defending from Liverpool.

15 minutes or so left.
#41
General discussion / Re: The Wire (tv drama)
September 12, 2009, 03:03:09 PM
Check out homicide - a year on the killing streets.



And the corner - a year in the life of an inner city neighbourhood



Both doorstep sized books but will help with wire related withdrawal symptoms.
You can see where inspiration for a lot of the characters came from.
#42
GAA Discussion / Re: Paul Grimley goes to Monaghan
September 02, 2009, 06:29:30 PM
A lot of theories abound as to why Paul has turned down the job
if indeed this turns out to be the case.

No doubt the theories will multiply just as they did in the
wake of McDonnells resignation.

But I'm with Occam's razor on this one.
"when you have two competing theories that make exactly the same predictions, the simpler one is the better."

Paul Grimley felt shafted by the County Board last time round.
Revenge is a dish best served cold etc
#43
Bosingwa 9/1 to get first yellow card with PP.

Like the look of Barcelona -1 at 15/8 with same.
#44
Mark Lawrenson doesn't know when to keep his mouth shut.

Anyone else hear him on Today FM last night, where he seemed
to suggest 'someone' told him that Rafa had walked?
#45
General discussion / John Martyn RIP
January 29, 2009, 07:32:37 PM
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=LOi_wxypeGc

RIP Big fella.
Spent his later years in Thomastown Kilkenny.


John Martyn, who has died at the age of 60, was widely regarded as one of the most soulful and innovative singer-songwriters of his generation.

His music - a marriage of blues, folk, dub and funk - has been cited as an influence by artists as varied as U2, Portishead and Eric Clapton.

Although he rarely troubled the charts, many of his albums - especially Solid Air - are regarded as classics.

But the singer battled with drugs and alcohol throughout his career.



John Martyn
Born Ian David McGeachy in New Malden, Surrey, Martyn's parents divorced when he was five.

He spent his childhood alternating between his mother's houseboat in England and his father's home in Scotland, where he was exposed to the music of both the Presbyterian Church and the English music hall.

Moving to London in his late teens, he became a fixture at Les Cousins - the Soho club at the centre of the city's folk scene, which also spawned the likes of Ralph McTell, Bert Jansch and Al Stewart.

Soon after, he became the first white act to be signed to Chris Blackwell's Island Records, and recorded his debut album, London Conversation, for £158 in 1968.

On the road, he began to experiment with electronic effects - notably a tape device known as the Echoplex, which provided his signature sound.

By 1969, he was married to blues singer Beverley Kutner, with whom he recorded 1970's Stormbringer in Woodstock, where the couple lived near Bob Dylan.

"Jimi Hendrix owned a house literally over the road," Martyn said in 2007. "He used to fly up every Thursday in a purple helicopter. He was very quiet and used to tell me how much he loved the animals."


Martyn won a lifetime achievement prize at 2008's Radio 2 Folk Awards
Martyn cemented his reputation with 1973's Solid Air, described as the "musical equivalent of a reassuring hug" by Q Magazine, which named it the 67th best British album of all time in 2000.

The haunting title track was dedicated to his friend and fellow singer-songwriter Nick Drake - who died of an overdose shortly after it was finished, aged 26.

The following few years saw Martyn descend into alcoholism, with live performances swinging erratically between moments of inspired genius and incoherent inebriation.

The singer later recalled an occasion in Spain where he had been so drunk he fell off the stage. "I still got three encores," he noted.

Inevitably, however, the substance abuse took a toll on his personal life and his marriage broke up towards the end of the 1970s.




Songs from Solid Air were used in BBC drama series Titanic Town
Grace and Danger, released in 1980, presented a painfully honest depiction of the divorce - and Martyn later told recording engineer Phil Brown that "he had never written a good song since" leaving his wife.

Nonetheless, his subsequent albums - Glorious Fool and Well Kept Secret (the former produced by Phil Collins) - were the highest-charting records of his career.

In the late 1990s, Martyn began to experiment with electronic dance sounds and scored a top 40 hit as a featured vocalist on Deliver Me - a dance record by Faithless musician Sister Bliss.

But his life continued to be blighted by drug dependency and alcohol abuse.

In 2003, he had to have his right leg amputated below the knee after a cyst the size of a golf ball burst (although Martyn told some reporters he lost the limb after crashing his car into a stray cow).

"It only affected me getting in and out of bed, cars and theatres," he told The Mirror in 2008.

"I wasn't too pleased about it, but whatever happens to your bod, happens. I'd have died if they hadn't cut the leg off. My blood would have been poisoned."

The singer, who took to performing in a wheelchair, told Q Magazine he had no regrets.

"If I could control myself more, I think the music would be much less interesting," he said.

"I'd probably be a great deal richer but I'd have had far less fun and I'd be making really dull music."

Shortly before his death, Martyn was appointed an OBE in the New Year Honours.


From the BBC