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I removed the following line from the second paragraph:

"At this point in Marillion's career, the band was still huge and had a much larger worldwide following than it has today."

Maybe if someone finds a proper source for that claim we can put it back. 87.206.116.54 (talk) 18:34, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Sorry but that's nonsense. "Huge" is not a well-defined word, and they were never "huge" on the same scale as U2 or Oasis. Still, their previous albums had reached no. 1 and no. 2 and had spawned top ten hit singles, they outsold arena dates across Europe, etc. All of this is easily verifiable. That said, the article is in bad need of attention. Instead of telling us about the actual album, it's waxing lyrical about Steve H's childhood, previous bands etc. That belongs in Steve Hogarth or Marillion, not here. Jimmy Fleischer (talk) 14:42, 17 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Removed material

[edit]

I wrote the comment above three quarters of a year ago, and nobody replied or did anything about it. I've therefore taken care of this myself. Just in case someone still wants it, here is the text I removed:


Hogarth was born in Kendal, UK on 14 May, 1959, and at the age of 17 he bought his first piano and learned to play by himself. From there on, he focused on how to get into the music business. After a couple of guest appearances with several bands, he joined The Europeans and released two albums, Vocabulary and Recurring Dreams, before forming How We Live with guitarist Colin Woore and releasing one record, Dry Land, with this band in 1987. This record went relatively quiet by the public. The first ever concert with Steve as the new lead singer was in a small pub somewhere in Aylesbury. The band wanted it to be some kind of rehearsal before going out on the world wide tour later that year. The band put out the word that they were going to do a small gig for only a couple of people in the pub, and when they arrived on the day of the gig, they quickly found out that a lot more people had found the venue than they had anticipated. The crowd was so big that the band actually had to climb out of the back window when the gig was over because the crowd had no intention of letting them slip out. This was the first positive experience Steve had with the band, and from there on, things only improved. The band opened their tour in a sold out venue in Paris later that year, and through the concert, the public were so loud with excitement and cheering that the band actually had to wait in between songs for them to settle down a bit. Steve Hogarth later said (loosely quoted from the From Stoke Row To Ipanema video): "It was an incredible experience. The crowd went absolutely ballistic on us, and there was this one time in the middle of the show when they cheered so loud that it was impossible for us to start with the next song. For fully two minutes we just stood there and accepted it. It almost brought a tear to my eye." The new frontman was fully accepted by the fans, and the Seasons End Tour is the biggest tour Marillion has done with Steve as the band's singer.


Jimmy Fleischer (talk) 10:59, 22 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

[edit]

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