And also, Peeping tom. But this choice might be more personal. But like when i did my list of 100 favorite songs, i had room for one placebo song and it was between WYIN and peeping tom. Went with the later but could have been either really.
I must insist on being a pessimist, I'm a loner in a catastrophic mind
i bumped this thread because i've been listening to a lot of placebo and it was the last one about them i remembered sorry if bumping an old thread of yours creeped you out or anything
i wore so much black eye makeup at a placebo show when i was 16. had a lot of fun, but later their songs became deeply tied to a bad breakup with the person i went with
hansibansix wrote:placebo is amazing, the cure of the 00s...
do teens still celebrate bands that were popular a decade before they were born? for me it was the smiths and other 80s stuff, but what band is legendary to 14 year olds today?
Placebo FB page informed me that next week black market music will be 20 years old.
As much as i liked Sleeping with ghosts when it came out, i think now factually their last great record was BMM. Even if it DOES have Spite and Malice on it....
I don'T rate anything after SWG but i don'T think many people do anyway.
I must insist on being a pessimist, I'm a loner in a catastrophic mind
i distinctly remember writing these lyrics in a notebook at some point:
i'm unclean a libertine and every time i vent my spleen i seem to lose the power of speech you're slipping slowly from my reach you grow me like an evergreen you've never seen the lonely me at all
katastroika wrote:Without you I'm nothing is a classic record. Sound of The Fall. It's time to listen to a full Placebo record.
I have always felt that way, I have no idea what month it was released but I remember being in the darkroom of my photography class during my first semester at community college (so think September-November) and for years I've had a certain vivid memory of leaning over a vat of developing chemicals and just breathing in that specific scent while "Pure Morning" played from a radio in a shadowy corner of the narrow L-shaped room.
When you say "sound of The Fall," I assume you mean autumn and not Mark E Smith