Quote meast="meast"Agree very much with Devonian, the music is awful, yes I know some people like it, but I prefer to let the crowd create the noise, after we score a try it's a competition between the crowds chants and music.
I don't particularly like the liquidator song either and don't think it adds anything at all, not the clubs doing but I much prefer when teams ran out onto the field separately to either cheers or boos which notched the atmosphere up not this football style of walking out slowly together and lining up staring into space for 2 minutes.
And as a singer at the back, I can assure you that most of us are respectful towards the opposition although we do our best to put then off during a game.'"
The Liquidator song is rubbish. It doesn't mean anything.
The club needs to understand that the history is there and it's something that they can tap into and sell.
Here's the music to the original club song. I'm not too good at reading music, but I think I have an idea how it must go.
[urlhttp://www.huddersfieldrlheritage.co.uk/Documents/Souvenir%20Brochures/Hurrah%20For%20The%20Claret%20&%20Gold.pdf[/url
And here's the official song of the Adelaide Crows AFL team
[urlhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=otd-dfhzaEw[/url
My suggestion would be to record "Hurrah for the Claret and Gold" in the same style as the Crows song - and play that when they come out.
If you've listened to the Crows song, you're probably thinking that would be rubbish. But trust me, I've watched the Crows and it's brilliant.
And here's the legendary Harry Caray singing Take Me Out to the Ballgame during the seventh innings stretch at the Chicago Cubs.
[urlhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBYz2ftTvBo[/url
This is the sort of quirk and tradition that gives people a feeling of connection to the club and the traditions of the club in a way that playing something generic like The Liquidator can't.
If you played Hurrah for the Claret and Gold at the start, then people's first impression would be to laugh and say it's crap. Within a few matches they'd be singing along. After a couple of seasons it would be such an integral part of the whole thing it would seem like it was always the way it was. That's how you build a connection up between the club and the people who support the club.