Music at the Movies – The End of the End for Black SabbathMusic at the Movies – The End of the End for Black SabbathCineplex Events9/26/2017 10:04:00 Am
Black Sabbath (est. 1968) is done. Retired. Finished. Seriously. They mean it this time. It’s over. I mean, why else would they call this farewell tour The End?
Okay, so maybe it’s not really the end of Sabbath. Although Ozzy says that he’s done with the band, he’s said that before. And why didn’t he make a proper farewell statement at the end of the last show? Tony Iommi doesn’t want to tour anymore for health reasons, but he says he’d consider recording a new album and perhaps the odd on-off gig. Geezer? He’ll go along with whatever Ozzy and Tony say. Bill Ward wasn’t part of this farewell because he was fighting with the other three,...
Black Sabbath (est. 1968) is done. Retired. Finished. Seriously. They mean it this time. It’s over. I mean, why else would they call this farewell tour The End?
Okay, so maybe it’s not really the end of Sabbath. Although Ozzy says that he’s done with the band, he’s said that before. And why didn’t he make a proper farewell statement at the end of the last show? Tony Iommi doesn’t want to tour anymore for health reasons, but he says he’d consider recording a new album and perhaps the odd on-off gig. Geezer? He’ll go along with whatever Ozzy and Tony say. Bill Ward wasn’t part of this farewell because he was fighting with the other three,...
- 9/26/2017
- by Cineplex Events
- Cineplex
Music at the Movies – David Gilmour at PompeiiMusic at the Movies – David Gilmour at PompeiiCineplex Events8/22/2017 3:08:00 Pm
When Mount Vesuvius rained holy hell upon Pompeii on August 24 in the year 79 Ce—the day after Vulcania, the festival of the Roman god of fire and volcanoes, no less—it created one of the great disasters of the Roman Empire, wiping out a city founded seven hundred years earlier.
Fast-forward 1,893 years. Excavations of the old city had begun in the 16th century and eventually turned the region into a tourist hotspot, which is what attracted film director Adrian Maben in 1971. He was looking for his lost passport when he wandered back to the deserted amphitheatre and was fascinated by its ancient majesty and fantastic acoustics. He’d been looking for an unconventional place to stage some kind of Pink Floyd event.
Wouldn’t this be a brilliant spot to shoot a concert film?...
When Mount Vesuvius rained holy hell upon Pompeii on August 24 in the year 79 Ce—the day after Vulcania, the festival of the Roman god of fire and volcanoes, no less—it created one of the great disasters of the Roman Empire, wiping out a city founded seven hundred years earlier.
Fast-forward 1,893 years. Excavations of the old city had begun in the 16th century and eventually turned the region into a tourist hotspot, which is what attracted film director Adrian Maben in 1971. He was looking for his lost passport when he wandered back to the deserted amphitheatre and was fascinated by its ancient majesty and fantastic acoustics. He’d been looking for an unconventional place to stage some kind of Pink Floyd event.
Wouldn’t this be a brilliant spot to shoot a concert film?...
- 8/22/2017
- by Cineplex Events
- Cineplex
After crushing the dreams of a seven-year-old girl last week at a gig at Hamilton, Ontario's Copps Coliseum, The Who's Pete Townshend has made a point of apologizing to her and her father for an incident during the concert.
On Feb. 19, Eric Costello and his daughter Jenny — a huge fan of the British rock band — traveled from Cleveland to see the group perform its 1973 album "Quadrophenia" in its entirety along with other hits. According to the Toronto Sun, Janey brought a homemade sign with her that read "Smash Your Guitar, Pete!" and displayed the sign near the front of the stage while with her father.
"Go away with that sign please, just go away with it, just go away with it," Townshend said when he spotted the sign as shown by the Toronto Sun on a video clip. "Don't bring your children, use them. I want to tell you two...
On Feb. 19, Eric Costello and his daughter Jenny — a huge fan of the British rock band — traveled from Cleveland to see the group perform its 1973 album "Quadrophenia" in its entirety along with other hits. According to the Toronto Sun, Janey brought a homemade sign with her that read "Smash Your Guitar, Pete!" and displayed the sign near the front of the stage while with her father.
"Go away with that sign please, just go away with it, just go away with it," Townshend said when he spotted the sign as shown by the Toronto Sun on a video clip. "Don't bring your children, use them. I want to tell you two...
- 3/1/2013
- by Huffington Post Music Canada
- Huffington Post
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