This guy did an amazing run of shows about Zeppelin and has starting branching out into other bands.
He does really detailed work, check it out!
This guy did an amazing run of shows about Zeppelin and has starting branching out into other bands.
He does really detailed work, check it out!
Looks interesting.![]()
Where Are They Now? Yes news: http://www.bondegezou.co.uk/wh_now.htm
Blogdegezou, the accompanying blog: http://bondegezou.blogspot.com/
I watched this.
First things first: he's no Rael (from this parish)!
He has a very odd take on Pirates, which gets even odder when he's comparing it (unfavourably) with Memoirs (a piece I've always liked, nevertheless).
The best section is around the middle, when he's collated some rehearsal tapes, which point at a very different sound that the the record could have had - with some very heavy & loud drum sounds from Palmer.
Last edited by per anporth; 02-26-2024 at 03:27 AM.
Making Wikipedia marginally more interesting at:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCul...PXchSo_vDxtcLg
I absolutely agree - LA Nights, Bullfrog, Close But Not Touching, Food for Your Soul & the revisited Tank, are standouts from the Works lps, & gesture towards a quite new musical direction that could have been followed.
My guess is that Lake had little interest in this kind of musical direction, or that it wouldn't have suited his approach to bass guitar.
It is interesting to think about what approach might have actually saved ELP from the smarmy tripe of Love Beach. Danger Money is clearly an artistically valid possibility.
Here's another one... Sky . It is surprising that ELP and their record company suits totally missed this opportunity, particularly since most of us have chosen Canario as the only listenable (very good actually) track from LB. Had they made a whole LP's worth of Canarios they might have ended up with something like this and yielded a top-10 album.
Glad you mentioned Back Door. Always been one of my favorites. They didn't start out fusion-like, though; originally a 3-piece (sax/bass/drums) output with blues and jazz roots. Added keyboards and vocals in later releases, but still great. Check out the first three albums: s/t, Another Fine Mess and 8th Street Nites.
A lot of what Mohini Dey is doing reminded me of what that 3-piece lineup is capable of when you have a bass player as skilled as Mohini or BD's Colin Hodgkinson.
(The connection here is that Carl Palmer produced the Activate album.)
What we feel we have to solve is why the dregs have not dissolved.
That was kind of interesting. I'm not a huge ELP fan but I like rock documentaries. I have a compilation that contains the epic Tarkus, and Brain Salad. I'm curious about Memoirs of An Officer...... Is it any good?
Hurtleturtled Out of Heaven - an electronic music composition, on CD and vinyl
https://michaelpdawson.bandcamp.com
http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Pr...MCD-spc-7.aspx
Not in my opinion. There's maybe 4-ish minutes around the 11-minute mark that are somewhat interesting, but to me, the rest is a jumble of poorly arranged, boring, overly sentimental drivel, that almost completely lacks energy and any sense of direction.
I did watch the documentary, and I think the guy comparing "Memoirs" to "Pirates" is laughable. The worst knock on the lyrics for "Pirates" is that they're a bit cliched, though at times, I think they're actually quite clever, and at least capture the "spirit" of Pirate mystique (though as Sinfield has rightly pointed out, not the reality). I think the music is exceptional, and rocks even better in live versions that don't include the orchestra. The idea that "Memoirs" is some kind of "hidden ELP gem" is stretching things beyond the breaking point, imo. I think the fact that ELP included "Pirates" in their later reunion tours is testimony that they liked the piece, and Palmer is even on record that he liked the lyrics.
Some of the history in the documentary was interesting, and the rehearsal material was definitely eye-opening at times. It truly sounds nothing like the almost uniformly execrable results that were released. The guy's obviously entitled to his opinions about how the music stacks up, but for me, this remains among the worst albums ever made, and I doubt any of his calls to ignore the cover and give the songs a shot will change many minds.
Bill
Always thought Love Beach was Palmer's best stripped back playing . Much less busy but still some interesting fills , also it’s not the stainless steel kit , it’s wooden shell Gretsch , it sounds fantastic
Ok, I heard Memoires. I probably don't need to hear it again but it was ok. I'd call it Yacht Prog. I mean, the second half has a bit of adventure.
I heard...Canario.... It's bouncy, proggy, and cute..
I might as well listen to the whole album..![]()
Hurtleturtled Out of Heaven - an electronic music composition, on CD and vinyl
https://michaelpdawson.bandcamp.com
http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Pr...MCD-spc-7.aspx
Not a bad homemade doc at all. His opinion of Pirates is the total opposite of mine.
I've been telling to a friend for years how much I would love an instrumental version of this album. There's some cool stuff buried under the those horrible lyrics. Keith does some cool flourishes here and there and Carl drum production is probably the greatest thing on this album. Canario is classic ELP. Memoirs has very beautiful piano passages. Keith is channeling the Romantics (not the band) on this one. The last part has some cool synth orchestration, but overall the song has an unfinished feeling to it, like a good fleshed out demo, but still a demo. Greg sounds like he doesn't give a damn bass wise, playing mostly guitar (He already showed a lost of interest towards bass playing during the Works tour).
Remove the lyrics from "Taste of My Love"?? No way!
Call up room service
Order peaches and cream
I like my dessert first
If you know what I mean
Yeah, taste it, taste it, taste it
Around the maze of pleasure
To the gates of pain
You're driving me insane
Take all you need from the taste of my love
I'm gonna love you
Like nobody ever loved you
Climb on my rocket
And we'll fly
I really enjoyed the doc. I remember buying LB as a cutout LP circa 1981 or 82 for $1.99 because, you know, it's ELP, how bad could it be?? Well, hehe, worse than I could have possibly imagined... I agree that the doc narrator has far too charitable a view of Memoirs. I've never been able to sit through the whole thing.
But the doc does a great job explaining the pressures felt by even one of the world's largest acts of the 1970s. Times were changing, they were all used to the lifestyles of royalty by this time, the machine had to be fed. I can't imagine this is what Ahmet Ertegun had in mind when he pushed them to make a more commercial record. I'm sure he would not have released it had he actually heard the damn thing.
Yeah that JCM guy does some good videos. I don't agree with his opinion on Pirates either, but everyone is entitled to their own.
I like LB better than In the Hot Seat, and I think also better than Black Moon. There's a few dreadful Lake tracks but Canario and Memoirs are pretty good.
Where Are They Now? Yes news: http://www.bondegezou.co.uk/wh_now.htm
Blogdegezou, the accompanying blog: http://bondegezou.blogspot.com/
My progressive music site: https://pienemmatpurot.com/ Reviews in English: https://pienemmatpurot.com/in-english/
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