in the live version (also on you tube) he takes back the clash being just a band

Moderator: aquaphase
um, no.Amen to Pheonix.
I think the concept is meant to be tongue in cheek so don't take it to much to heart - it's a bit of a poke at authority / conventional thoughts on subjects - the OED being a source of authority like the NME or the Bible. He probably got a bollocking at school for spelling it wrong in a test or summatum, no.Amen to Pheonix.
...and I would point Dan Le Sac (who I've never heard of) back to the part about not putting recording artists on pedestals. That means he doesn't get to decide the way words are spelled "no matter what the Oxford English Dictionary says."
The ancient Greek writer Herodotus learnt the legend of the phoenix at Heliopolis in Egypt, where, he stated, the cult of the mythical bird was as old as the city. Some modern scholars derive ancient Greek **some greek word** ‘phoenix’ from ancient Egyptian bnw, a type of heron widely known as a symbol in Egyptian religion, but the resemblance is not clear. More recently a Semitic, possibly Phoenician, origin for the word has been proposed. It has also been suggested that the name of the bird derives from ancient Greek **some greek word** red (see PHOENICIAN n. and adj.), with reference to the prevailing colour of its body (Herodotus 2. 73: **some greek words**, its plumage is partly golden and partly red).
Now I feel better.And just for the record, the Beatles were most assuredly NOT just a band. Smug self-satisfied kids just don't know nothin'!
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 10 guests