Gert lush mate! also very cool having a Wurzels member for your tutor. Had a drink with them a few time at local gigs and such, love the fact as the night gets later the words to various songs change to a much ruder versionTipsy Giant said:My tutor at college is the bassist from Wurzles!
I'm from the west country and we do not have a sophisticated accent, but i've meet americans who can't tell the difference, even when I say ark at e
Yeah he was a legend, taught me everything I know about deconstructing music, he knows his stuff!Rastien said:Gert lush mate! also very cool having a Wurzels member for your tutor. Had a drink with them a few time at local gigs and such, love the fact as the night gets later the words to various songs change to a much ruder versionTipsy Giant said:My tutor at college is the bassist from Wurzles!
I'm from the west country and we do not have a sophisticated accent, but i've meet americans who can't tell the difference, even when I say ark at e![]()
This. When Americans say "British Accent", what they really mean is "Upper-Class, Well-Educated Southern-English Accent".thaluikhain said:Define "British accent", though.
An Irish accent isn't the same as a Welsh accent, which isn't the same as a Scottish accent, and they aren't limited to one each.
England, with 50+ million people (though almost no land mass) has any number of accents.
Now, various upper class British accents tend to sound sophisticated to me, doesn't really matter what part of Britain.
IMHO, he sounds like someone who desperately wants to sound like the smartest man on Earth, not quite the same thing. Watching him on QI when he goes off on a tangent not provided by the QI elves and getting everything wrong...painful.Nokshor said:OT: It depends what part of Britain. Stephen Fry for instance sounds like the smartest man on Earth. He probably is, but that's not the point.
Glorious.SecretNegative said:"Wa's dis, sweethar', why di' I find you wi' 'nother man?"
"Oh Petah, his no'one, he no' my lovah"
"Then the scum shoulda tyke his dandy fine pack 'n leave.
"Oh Petah, you'r thi only wone for me."
Yeah, real classy.
They're pretty different the further south you go.To be honest Northern Irish accents are probably more similar to Scottish accents than the rest of Ireland which isn't that surprising when you consider that a large portion of the population of NI are of Scottish descentthaluikhain said:True, meant Northern Ireland, though I don't know how seperate their accents are from Republic of Ireland.
Jedward are,unfortunately,Irish not BritishRandallJohn said:American here. Sometimes I do get this impression, but it doesn't last. For every David Mitchell or Stephen Fry, there's a Dappy or a Jedward.
Ooo, good catch. Amended.MetalDooley said:They're pretty different the further south you go.To be honest Northern Irish accents are probably more similar to Scottish accents than the rest of Ireland which isn't that surprising when you consider that a large portion of the population of NI are of Scottish descentthaluikhain said:True, meant Northern Ireland, though I don't know how seperate their accents are from Republic of Ireland.
Jedward are,unfortunately,Irish not BritishRandallJohn said:American here. Sometimes I do get this impression, but it doesn't last. For every David Mitchell or Stephen Fry, there's a Dappy or a Jedward.![]()