He is so sorely missed. Obviously by his close family but also by anyone who loved his comedy. I first saw him live nearly 30 years ago at the Red Rose Labour Club on Seven Sisters Road. He was as funny then as he was when he became really famous. So sad he's no longer here .
Thank you! I bought this CD when it first came out but lost it years ago. I've been hoping ever since that someone would put it on YT! I was the frontman in a hairy heavy rock biker-type band for years, and at one point in every gig there was always a pause in between a couple of songs while the guitarist switched instruments, so there was an empty space for about 2 minutes (which is a fairly long time at a rock gig!) that I used to have to fill by talking to the audience. So I used to try to take the 'comedian' route and take the piss out of people closest to me in the crowd, which didn't _always_ work as well as I'd have liked in every circumstance! Until I got this CD. Then I found out that all I had to do was put on Sean's Bernard Manning voice and do the, "How d'you stop a dog humping your leg..?" joke. The laughter at the punchline filled the empty space on its own! And, ironically, I used to literally do his piss-take bit of singing "Feelings..." and use that as the count-in to go straight into a full-band headbanger! RIP Sean. Thanks, mate. You saved me from more launched pint glasses than you ever knew! 😂
His comedy kind of reminds me of Bill Bailey a lot...I know they were close friends and wrote together sometimes, I expect some of the ideas in this they shared over a drink or something...
I'm assuming that people know by posting this (illegally), listening to it for free and not buying the dvd or whatever you are literally robbing from his family now he's dead? If he was alive his agents would get it taken down but noone thoughts for these things when the artist isn't here any more
@@IndecentExposure. Not true. Copyrights typically expire a set number of years (varies by country) after initial release. Copyrights (and by extension any future royalties they generate) can be passed on as part of someone's estate when they die.