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Most Underrated Bands Of All Time.

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Loved the Skids me, much better than Big Country after Richard Jobson left.

You mean after Stuart Adamson left.

The Skids and Big Country where two completely different bands, with two completely different sounds, so there’s no comparison.

I’m a massive fan of both, but musically Big Country were the much better band.
 
You mean after Stuart Adamson left.

The Skids and Big Country where two completely different bands, with two completely different sounds, so there’s no comparison.

I’m a massive fan of both, but musically Big Country were the much better band.
My bad, I was referring to Jobson jacking it in, but Adamson did leave the Skids first the dirty traitor. I was never really a fan of Big Country, much preferred the rawness of the Skids.
 
Smashing pumpkins. Billy Corgan kinda poisoned their legacy a wee bit mind. Gish, Siamese dream and Mellon collie and the infinite sadness are fairly peerless in my opinion. Very few weak album fillers.
 


I'm good mates with the old drummer Dally. He"s now the face of sky vegas. They were very good and very underrated in the UK. They had more success in Europe.

Ian is still gigging I think. I did hear that they were thinking of putting the band back together.


@Khalekan

Not exactly a Pele comeback but Ian and Dally just recorded this one for shits and giggles.

 
(Also: Brian Jonestown Massacre; Shockabilly; the original iteration of the Flamin' Groovies with Roy Loney; and Richard Thompson as solo artiste.)


Saw Eugene Cranbourne (shockabilly) at a bar show a few months back. His banjo version of We Are The Champions was outstanding
 
Saw Eugene Cranbourne (shockabilly) at a bar show a few months back. His banjo version of We Are The Champions was outstanding
Eugene Chadbourne's probably the greatest jazz musician ever to emerge from rustic punk. In the '80s a friend of mine's band played on the same bill as Eugene and after his set he came back to the dressing room, sat down, and did twelve bong hits in a row before saying a word. Ah, youth.
 
Eugene Chadbourne's probably the greatest jazz musician ever to emerge from rustic punk. In the '80s a friend of mine's band played on the same bill as Eugene and after his set he came back to the dressing room, sat down, and did twelve bong hits in a row before saying a word. Ah, youth.

Fupped his name up... my bad.
 

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