Liverpool




Fan de l'OM oui, et West Ham est mon équipe favorite en Angleterre. C'est la musique du film de Green Street Hooligan, qui relate le groupe de supportère ICF (Inter City Fan) meme si ils ont changé le nom dans le film.ABN-AMRO a écrit :@Anthoine
C'est plutôt le Celtic qui a le même chant que Liverpool![]()
Sinon la chanson de west ham est très belle, c'est celle du fil Hooligan. T'arriverais pas à trouver une vidéo ?
P.S il me semblait que tu était fan de l'OM
Liverpool or Celtic: who Walked Alone first?
Living in an area with a large contingent of Liverpool fans, writes Damian,
who lives in Chester should you be wondering, I'm constantly being drawn
into debates about who sang You'll Never Walk Alone first. I've failed to
come up with evidence to support my belief that it was the Celtic faithful.
I'd appreciate any information which serves to conclude this dispute once
and for all.
While many Celtic fan-based websites provide the words to You'll Never
Walk Alone, and it features on the CD Green & White Anthems, there is no
historical evidence that Celtic fans sang it on their terraces first. Instead,
a cursory glance back in time shows that Liverpool have the much
stronger claims.
After all, the song, originally written by Rodgers and Hammerstein in 1945
for the Broadway musical Carousel, only became a terrace favourite after
it was covered by Gerry and the Pacemakers in November 1963. Almost
immediately - as footage from Panorama in 1964 shows - Liverpool
supporters adopted it.
As Paul Fields points out: "Before the early 60s football fans made noise
and occasionally chanted something brief (like Play Up Pompey!) but it
was the Kop that started singing popular songs of the day (mainly
Merseybeat songs such as Gerry and the Pacemakers' You'll Never Walk
Alone) and later started to adapt the lyrics of songs to celebrate the team
and its players.
"If any Celtic fans still claim that they sang it first, it would have to predate
Gerry's version. Now can you really see thousands of working class
Glaswegians in the 50s/early 60s spontaneously joining in a sing-along
from a Rodgers and Hammerstein musical?" No, us neither.