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Thread started 12/17/07 2:42am

iloveannie

Spice Girls.

Does anybody hear actually like their music? Did any orger go to the O2 to see them? Don't be ashamed, I've eaten in the OXO Tower and McDonalds. It's ok to like polars.
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Reply #1 posted 12/17/07 3:09am

thekidsgirl

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I LOVE Spice Girls! biggrin
Thier music is good fun upbeat stuff. I also like that
they don't take themselves to seriously.

To me, cheesey pop music is great when it is happy, non-pretentious, lighthearted, and upbeat.

I wish I could have caught them live but the show near me sold out before I even knew they had added more dates sad
If you will, so will I
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Reply #2 posted 12/17/07 3:25am

CHIC0

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thekidsgirl said:

I LOVE Spice Girls! biggrin
Thier music is good fun upbeat stuff. I also like that
they don't take themselves to seriously.

To me, cheesey pop music is great when it is happy, non-pretentious, lighthearted, and upbeat.

I wish I could have caught them live but the show near me sold out before I even knew they had added more dates sad



The girls have had a fantastic time performing in the USA and Canada and look forward to returning in 2008, when they will perform in Boston, Montreal, Toronto, New York, Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia and Washington DC.




wink
heart
LOVE
♪♫♪♫

♣¤═══¤۩۞۩ஜ۩ஜ۩۞۩¤═══¤♣
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Reply #3 posted 12/17/07 3:30am

thekidsgirl

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CHIC0 said:

thekidsgirl said:

I LOVE Spice Girls! biggrin
Thier music is good fun upbeat stuff. I also like that
they don't take themselves to seriously.

To me, cheesey pop music is great when it is happy, non-pretentious, lighthearted, and upbeat.

I wish I could have caught them live but the show near me sold out before I even knew they had added more dates sad



The girls have had a fantastic time performing in the USA and Canada and look forward to returning in 2008, when they will perform in Boston, Montreal, Toronto, New York, Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia and Washington DC.





wink


so are you gonna tell us about the show or what? biggrin

.
[Edited 12/17/07 3:31am]
If you will, so will I
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Reply #4 posted 12/17/07 3:36am

CHIC0

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thekidsgirl said:

CHIC0 said:




The girls have had a fantastic time performing in the USA and Canada and look forward to returning in 2008, when they will perform in Boston, Montreal, Toronto, New York, Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia and Washington DC.





wink

so are you gonna tell us about the show or what? biggrin


and spoil it for you?? lol


you will love it!! my favourite performances were

"Viva Forever" : the opening was the stuff!! dancing jig
"Holler"
"Spice Up Your Life" (but not the 1st one) wink

and they each do a solo.

i wish i could go again. and yes it was great FUN!!! be prepared to dancing jig

that's all i'll say. well except, maybe you should reserve your ticket NOW! lol
heart
LOVE
♪♫♪♫

♣¤═══¤۩۞۩ஜ۩ஜ۩۞۩¤═══¤♣
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Reply #5 posted 12/17/07 5:46am

iloveannie

but.. but.. umm... but, err, how can you , umm appreciate the Spice Girls when you have an understanding of an artist like Prince? I'm contradicting my first post I guess, yet I still find it difficult to have anything but loathing for non-musicians like this. I guess I need to evaluate my opinion on such 'musical output'.

Is it a case of "I know it's crap but I like it"?
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Reply #6 posted 12/17/07 8:57am

sosgemini

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iloveannie said:

but.. but.. umm... but, err, how can you , umm appreciate the Spice Girls when you have an understanding of an artist like Prince? I'm contradicting my first post I guess, yet I still find it difficult to have anything but loathing for non-musicians like this. I guess I need to evaluate my opinion on such 'musical output'.

Is it a case of "I know it's crap but I like it"?


if prince can release syrupy shlock like "The Most Beautiful Girl In The World" and "Diamonds & Pearls" then the Spicegirls can co-exist...

IMHO.


lol
Space for sale...
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Reply #7 posted 12/17/07 8:58am

b3xy

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i admit i am going to see them in january mainly cos i was a fan the first time around and i just wanted to see them one more time razz

that being said i cant even consider them on the same level as prince and after the amazing summer i have a feeling i am likely to be dissappointed lol
With Love there is no Death
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Reply #8 posted 12/17/07 11:22am

ehuffnsd

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Not that i like the Spice Girls or Anything
http://prince.org/msg/8/254185

You CANNOT use the name of God, or religion, to justify acts of violence, to hurt, to hate, to discriminate- Madonna
authentic power is service- Pope Francis
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Reply #9 posted 12/17/07 11:24am

ehuffnsd

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b3xy said:

i admit i am going to see them in january mainly cos i was a fan the first time around and i just wanted to see them one more time razz

that being said i cant even consider them on the same level as prince and after the amazing summer i have a feeling i am likely to be dissappointed lol

it's apples and oranges.

The Return of the Spice Girls was fun and fullscale production that was just amazing. They did a great job staging it.
You CANNOT use the name of God, or religion, to justify acts of violence, to hurt, to hate, to discriminate- Madonna
authentic power is service- Pope Francis
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Reply #10 posted 12/17/07 11:58am

PricelessHo

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i'd DEF. love to see'em live one day nod
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Reply #11 posted 12/17/07 7:03pm

TotalAlisa

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I love their music.... big spice fan since elementry school... lolol i even bought spice girl stickers, candies and tattoos
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Reply #12 posted 12/17/07 7:20pm

DANGEROUSx

Haha I love 'em. love
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Reply #13 posted 12/17/07 8:42pm

ehuffnsd

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By Dave White
MSNBC contributor
updated 12:26 p.m. PT, Mon., Dec. 10, 2007
Within minutes of my arrival at The Spice Girls concert at Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles last Friday night, I had already stopped counting the number of women dressed as Ginger (skin-tight Union Jack dresses, boobs for days) versus the number of women dressed as Baby (pink baby-doll dress, giant white platform boots).

There were too many flying past for me to take an accurate census. And those Spice-impersonators traveled in packs of other young women. And those packs (many of them in mid-sing-along to “Wannabe”) merged with other packs, forming bigger, screamier mobs until finally, inside, they were one monster mass of overpowering female energy that engulfed and deafened me and my small band of gay male friends.

I tend to avoid acts in big arenas. And I tend to avoid pop shows. The last band I saw perform live was doom-metal band Sunn 0))). That show took place in a club and every person there looked like me: boots, jeans, black T-shirt with the name of a contrasting but complementary band on it. And paying $140 for a ticket to anything is on top of my list of Ways I Don’t Waste Cash. But my partner begged for the budget-denting evening out. And he doesn’t beg for that sort of thing very often. And he’s pretty adorable when he does. So off we went.

Now, I don’t want to give the impression that I wasn’t into seeing The Spice Girls on this reunion tour, or that it was some gross hipster ironic gesture. Like every other reasonable, fun-loving person on Earth, I love them. It’s like loving chocolate cake or baskets of puppies under a Christmas tree. I like everything about them: their look, their music, their Riot Grrl-inspired cartoon feminism, their cheekiness and the movie “Spice World.”

I have suspicious thoughts about people who actively anti-Spice
. I was ready to dance, to sing along, to bellow my loud support for recent immigrant Posh. I was even ready to buy a T-shirt, but the best one — featuring a sort of shopping list that read: BABY, GINGER, POSH, SCARY, SPORTY — was only available in women’s sizes. That bummed me.

That T-shirt problem was emblematic of the evening. My male friends and I were more-than-welcome visitors to the party, but the party wasn’t for us. I’d wrongly assumed that the night would be an event on par with a Madonna or Cher show, one that would rally equal numbers of women and gay men in support of the cause. But it didn’t. And it didn’t in a big big way. My gays and I were little specks of male flotsam on a giant lady-ocean.

The primary demographic looked to be 15 to 25, but that was by no means the only represented group. They were young, they were old, they were all types of woman. I swear that the three bust-augmented, meticulously made-up, obviously extension-wearing fans in front of us were strippers out for a night off from the pole. I knew it even more surely when one of them turned around and began actively flirting with us, ignoring what I always assume is our obvious homosexuality. “What Spice are you?” she purred to my partner, in a way that made me question our obviousness.

“Tubby Spice,” he shot back. “And this is Baldy Spice,” he continued, pointing at me. Then she turned around and continued sipping her margarita.

Finally, at 8:44 p.m. (show time on ticket: 8 p.m.), after a short video of five elementary-school-aged Spices unleashing butterflies into outer space played out on the giant arena screen, five women in glittery gold Roberto Cavalli outfits rose out of the stage and launched into the Carnaval-like stomp of “Spice Up Your Life.”

The high-pitched combination squeal-roar shot to an ear-piercing decibel and didn’t let up for the next 90 minutes. Racing through their post-“Wannabe” hits, “Say You’ll Be There,” “Stop” and “2 Become 1,” the five shiny members of the group (Posh, in metallic gold leggings, resembled the robot from the film “Metropolis,” and I hope that was intentional) took turns at solo material.

Eddie Murphy’s babymama Scary dragged an unsuspecting man from the audience, locked him in a stockade and covered Lenny Kravtiz’s “Are You Gonna Go My Way.” Baby and Sporty, the two with the best voices and the most successful post-Spice solo careers, took their turns. Ginger led a thunder, lightning and bare-chested-male-dancer sing-along of “It’s Raining Men.”

And Posh? She put on a dress and walked down the runway stage to RuPaul’s “Supermodel.” Maybe because of civic pride, a welcome-to-our-city gesture, she got the most applause. She is sort of built for Los Angeles, after all: she’s the joke who’s game to laugh at herself first, the one who’s smarter than the joke. (My partner to me, as a visibly perspiring Posh, in close-up, flashed onto the giant screen: “Look, she sweats!” to which I responded, “That’s what artists do.”) Anyway, she definitely chose the right city. Angelenos will help nurture her and Mr. Posh and whatever plastic surgery adventures they choose to have while blessing us with their presence.

But back to the show. They all took turns wearing their iconic outfits; a disco medley of songs not originally performed by Spice Girls took place and it threatened to Village People-ize them for a moment; some goofy, mostly inaudible-due-to-screaming stage banter about nothing happened; this one really wasted woman behind our row had to be repeatedly escorted back to her seat by security because she was flailing around in the aisles, hollering lyrics to every single song with all the drunken lung power she possessed; the male dancers cluttered the stage for a bit; and then the group’s last single, “Goodbye,” closed the show.


But we all knew that the encore was coming. And we were ready to sing even more loudly than we had in the previous 85 minutes. Scary introduced it coyly: “It’s the one with the zig-a-zig-ahh, I think.” And really, you haven’t lived until you’ve heard thousands and thousands of women, shouting, “ I WANNA HUH! I WANNA HUH! I WANNA HUH! I WANNA HUH!”
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22186910/


If you’re a guy, you’ve definitely not gotten any closer to what it must be like to attend a middle-school slumber party. And if you’re a non-fan, you’ll probably never get why jumping up and down to that “zig-a-zig-ahh” song, while the five cool Britons do the same, can fill you with so much joy. I don’t get you non-fans. We’ll never be close, you and me. Because if you wannabe in my life, you gotta get with my friends. And my friends’ names are Baby, Ginger, Posh, Scary and Sporty.
You CANNOT use the name of God, or religion, to justify acts of violence, to hurt, to hate, to discriminate- Madonna
authentic power is service- Pope Francis
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Reply #14 posted 12/18/07 2:16am

iloveannie

At which point they should have torched the place. No seriously, I'd really like to take Victoria out...


... with a gun.
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Reply #15 posted 12/18/07 3:20am

dag

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I like some of their songs.
"When Michael Jackson is just singing and dancing, you just think this is an astonishing talent. And he has had this astounding talent all his life, but we want him to be floored as well. We really don´t like the idea that he could have it all."
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Reply #16 posted 12/18/07 3:43am

iloveannie

DAILY TELEGRAPH - Helen Brown
"...Decked out in glitter, the Spice Girls looked like a set of skinny Woolworth baubles - cheap and cheerful but not at all to my taste.

But I refuse to sneer "Bah Humbug" at the thousands who rejoice that the Fun Girl Five have risen again."


THE SUN - Gordon Smart
"...Posh, Ginger, Scary, Baby and Sporty wowed their eager fans at the concert with brilliant dance routines, all their classic songs and very sexy outfits.

At one point the girls came out on stage in kinky leather gear, with their male dancers on leads."


THE TIMES - Pete Paphides
"...Because they haven't collectively scored enough hits to fill an entire show, solo spots were necessary.

Whilst other Spices used theirs to raise the profiles of their flagging solo careers...Posh Spice used her moment to self-referentially sashay along the catwalk to a pack of pretend photographers.

Of course, in Spiceworld, the usual rules of commerce and music - quality control, the faintest ability to sing, value for money - don't apply.

Consequently, nothing that the other four did elicited as much of a cheer as the very few things that the gold-attired Posh did. If that rankles with the others, then they weren't about to tell us."


THE GUARDIAN - Alexis Petridis
"...Bedevilled by a voice so thin it would be banned from Milan fashion week and with a post-Spice back catalogue you suspect not even she can remember, Victoria Beckham wisely forgoes singing."
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