Cabs' appearance on Snub TV on 12th March 1990. Interviews with Richard H. Kirk and Stephen Mallinder during the Groovy, Laidback & Nasty recordings.
Пікірлер: 22
@Universe0212 жыл бұрын
The best industrial-Alternative band of the world
@NTRSN-Archive2 жыл бұрын
My heroes rest in peace mister Kirk
@55tranquility11 ай бұрын
love the Cabs - love all their stuff as well as all Richard H Kirks (RIP) many releases. I also loved it when they went acid house, I still play Hypnotised now 👌
@christoroppolo87425 жыл бұрын
Cabaret Voltaire are God’s in hard core electro. Peace Christo 👽🎶🐕🛸☮️
@fredhandy206310 жыл бұрын
Great stuff! Thanks for posting! I used to catch this show late night on MTV or Nightflight years ago. I saw the Cab in NYC at the Ritz in '91. A very rare US appearance. They were on the bill with Front Line Assembly (opening), Einsturzende Neubauten (headliner). Wow!
@donkeykonguk7 жыл бұрын
I saw that show too. You can find the audio on youtube
@alexlord6613 Жыл бұрын
Punk was very conservative, CV were true radicals in contrast. Manicured noise was their thing set to radical politics and Kraftwerkian rhythms. A lot of their late 80s music was panned as a sell out at the time but, the best of it, sounds incredible now. Sensoria 12” shown here is a high point and the video takes me back to my student days in Sheffield. Meeting them (in the Leadmill!) was a high point of my degree period. I like nearly all their work, even Kirk’s CV work. I’m hypnotised.
@pigknickers2975 Жыл бұрын
Sensoria 12" was THE record of the time. Utterly brilliant record.
@alexlord6613 Жыл бұрын
@@pigknickers2975 Cut the Damn Camera and respect those who are those in authority.
@grahamburns212212 жыл бұрын
fascinating insight,they played there part in the 80s for me.great stuff
@distortech212 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing this wonderful interview!!!
@Fadknigge12 жыл бұрын
sehr interesant the interview !!
@uglycustard112 жыл бұрын
this was the beginning of my discovery of cabaret voltaire watching this in my hooded-top and cool as fuck t-shirt....first time I heard Nag Nag Nag !! amazing I just had to know more....and so I did buying all the cabs I could find starting with the YMCA live cd. Anyone have any Chris Watson era live bootlegs they would like to put on here?
@starstationearth4 жыл бұрын
From alternative trailblazers to Inner City clones.
@dollanspath15712 жыл бұрын
A bit harsh, but I see your point.
@pigknickers2975 Жыл бұрын
As the other comment, harsh but fair. Totally agreed, feel dirty for saying it!
@tvod117612 жыл бұрын
SSLの卓の前でなごんでる動画、初めて見た!
@regdwight2355 жыл бұрын
I am actually shocked by Hypnotised video.....Mallinder dancing in what kind of looks like a Diet Coke advert.Only recently been getting into them.I have Mix Up,Voices,Red Mecca ,12 x 45.....where I pictured dark unforgiving gods .Do not think I will be purchasing any of this era .
@streettab_9.3_5 жыл бұрын
Then you were never a true Cabs fan , I am 53 been into them since Nag Nag Nag , which I heard later in years on the John Peel show on radio one, in my teens , I live only 35 miles from Sheffield and saw them on many occasions, every gig they did , even it was the exact set list was different... true pioneers
@diskochimp2 жыл бұрын
@@streettab_9.3_ Bollocks. CV may've been "true pioneers" early on, but signing to Virgin was the death knell for their creative spirit. The Crackdown may've consolidated everything they'd done on Rough Trade into a sleeker, more commercial package but in doing so it alienated a lot of their original fans and didn't attract sufficient new ones to replace them, so their records went back to selling less than they'd sold on an indie. By signing to a major they were ill-advisedly bowing to market forces and that quickly became evident in the music they made, i.e. they began chasing trends rather than following their own path. CV didn't invent acid house, they merely jumped on the bandwagon earlier than most.
@23splenetix2 жыл бұрын
@@diskochimp What a tiresome old ted. After dabbling with Factory and signing to Virgin they made 3 or 4 good to great synth-pop/New Order-ish records that still stand up. It wouldn't have been 'creative' or remotely commercial to keep making over Red Mecca. Nobody would have bought stuff like that in the mid 80s.