Hello all,
Hope everyone's doing well.
I was moved to post this evening after reading Adam's notes for The Looks Or the Lifestyle (I choose Lifestyle), in which he mentions certain websites on which readers maintain that This is the Day, and Cure For Sanity were the "best albums of all time". He also mentions some people thinking that the Poppies were the "best band in the world".
I'm not sure if he's referring to this website and its previous incarnations or others. But if he was referring to the good ship pweination, then he misses the point. I have never heard anyone, *anyone* say that PWEI released the best albums of all time. The Poppies are a great listen, for sure, but the reason (I think) people followed them was they they saw a bunch of guys on stage that weren't much different from themselves, getting away with it, having a great time and coming up with some good tunes along the way. Who wouldn't love to be there too - a cracking excuse for a lot of good nights out.
From '93 onwards, right from when the first USENET newsletters were written, for me personally, pweination was as much about the "nation" bit, as it was about PWEI. Talk to most fans about PWEI and you'll probably hear more about the gig experiences, friendships secured, scrapes got into, stages dived, beers drunk than you would about the "quality" of the music as a standalone entity. Much like the band were off enjoying themselves through their tours, so too were the fans who attended the gigs each night. I'm not saying the songs were secondary, but they served to bring friends and relative strangers together for a great night out.
To use a football analogy, you may get beat every week but who goes to the footy to see the footy? It's all about the people you watch it with and the banter that ensues. If the Poppies are/were ever the best band in the world, it's because they served as a proxy to bring together some of the best people - people just like you.
If someone says the word PWEI to me, I don't think of the music - I think of the people, and the gigs. Whilst you can't (unfortunately) bottle and sell that essence, it's the energy created in those live performances, and the people that shared them, that will forever be the Poppies' legacy. And what a fantastic legacy to have created.
Tezzer