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whyterabbyt wrote: vurt wrote: drums - echo
not dr. avalanche? nah, too goth for my needs! echo has a cheerful disposition and will fit well with bowie and barrett, i think. ---- look for the true freak label. do not!feed the vampyr. chemically-enhanced-djinnetically-engineered-bio-divurtisy |
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| ^ | Joined: 25 Jan 2003 Member: #5605 Location: through the looking glass | ||
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Tony Levin, bass
John Mclaughlin, guitar Bill Bruford, drums Peter Gabriel, keyboards and vocals Chris Botti, trumpet In an all-night concert including "all you can consume" of the finest German beer on tap and the best Canadian Skunk. If I were a millionaire, I'd actually actively pursue this. |
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| ^ | Joined: 05 Feb 2004 Member: #12280 | ||
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rcat wrote: an all-night concert including "all you can consume" of the finest German beer on tap and the best Canadian Skunk. Sounds like a gig I played in Amsterdam, during the Cannabis Cup. There was a free vaporizer in the lobby, then at midnight balloons containing free spliffs floated down onto the dancefloor.
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| ^ | Joined: 27 Jul 2005 Member: #76240 Location: the wilds of wanny | ||
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*Anyone* who played in Frank Zappa's bands. |
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| ^ | Joined: 25 Aug 2005 Member: #79265 Location: North California | ||
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Guitar - Dimebag Darrell
Vox - Phil Anselmo, Regina Spektor, Chava Alberstein Drums - DJ Premier errr, okay, this doesn't go anywhere... |
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| ^ | Joined: 29 Nov 2000 Member: #117 Location: Vienna, Austria | ||
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Harry_HH wrote: When considering a great band (and even more especially from the managers point of view, who has to tolerate all the contradictions and still sell the band, as Doug here has suggested), one has to understand that "a great band" is not at all necessary the same as "a group of great musicians". Therefore this approach is rather childish. E.g. I dare to suspect that Moon-Jamerson rhythm combo wouldn't be ideal, how much I admire both musicians in their genre. The chemistry of the musicians is the core in everey really good band (good music a group of skillful musicians can create put to be a creative band in the long term is a different thing than play a couple of pieces), one famous example is of course the Beatles. For the same reason many attemps to build so called "supergroups" artificially often fail miserably. History knows maybe just one or two exeptions. Harry In fairness, I'd probably agree with your overall remarks Harry if this was a serious thread - but you and I know that it's not. Also, I don't think you'd get anything like the number of joyful, imaginative suggestions on a more serious thread as you do here. I disagree completely with your viewpoint that Jamerson and Moon could not have been an effective rhythm section together. For me it would be ideal because although Moon's style was not to play a Motown beat (at least not publicly), it is his incredible timing and control at all times on the drumkit that made me choose him - and I say this as a drummer of 22 years experience myself - that there is NO reason why Moon would not be able to play any (slower) music just as effectively. Hell, in a different era with different influences, I think that he would have been a fantastic jazz drummer. Similarly, although Jamerson is best known for his Motown funky grooves, it is his incredible imagination and feel for the instrument that I think would make him equally at home in plenty of other genres. More to the point, and as you can see from my other selections, it is not a Motown or Mod sound that I'm going for. It is a heavily rhythmic, somewhat reggae, sound above all else - hence McCook, Drummond, Wright, Ranglin and even Dury. Could Moon and Jamerson play in a reggae funk band? I think so not least because such a genre is built around the bass and drums. I also think they'd be great - with chances in every song for both players to have wild solos! And yeah, of course "a great band" is not at all necessary the same as "a group of great musicians". If it were, I'd have picked Hendrix, Presley and Wonder amongst others - but I didn't. I notice that you're yet to stick up your own band suggestion Harry - which of course you don't have to do, but why come onto a thread mainly to disagree with others? Ultimately, if you want to get serious then you'd have to say that there's no way of proving or disproving whether these musicians could work together - for the obvious reasons. However, this is a light-hearted thread. And as such, were these comments really necessary?: Harry_HH wrote: If we just want to list good musicians what's all that manager-crap in the header?
Harry_HH wrote: Therefore this approach is rather childish.
Also, is Keith really all that bad as a bassist?? Harry_HH wrote: Keith Richard(s) is a crap bass player. |
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| ^ | Joined: 19 Jun 2011 Member: #259079 Location: Sendai, Japan | ||
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Thank you to everyone who made such interesting (and in ZombieQueen's case, 'rather curious'!) choices.
Please keep them coming. |
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| ^ | Joined: 19 Jun 2011 Member: #259079 Location: Sendai, Japan | ||
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im a bit worried about why i was picked for drums? ive heard me play drums! ---- look for the true freak label. do not!feed the vampyr. chemically-enhanced-djinnetically-engineered-bio-divurtisy |
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| ^ | Joined: 25 Jan 2003 Member: #5605 Location: through the looking glass | ||
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^^ Assuming that you're not Keith Moon (which would be fantastic but also a bit worrying), using my detective skills I deduce that you are in fact...
John Wright. Or maybe Stewart Copeland? (actually a brilliant drummer). Anyway, having heard what you can do with your own music, I'd probably add you to my band Vurt as live mixing engineer - and let you lose on those effect buttons! Last edited by Doug1978 on Mon Jul 09, 2012 2:44 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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| ^ | Joined: 19 Jun 2011 Member: #259079 Location: Sendai, Japan | ||
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My new band, The Big Bottoms, would consist of:
Bass: Jaco Pastorius Percussive bass: Les Claypool Rhythm bass: Bootsy Collins Lead bass: Billy Sheehan Piccolo bass: Stanley Clarke Cage dancer: me |
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| ^ | Joined: 06 Sep 2006 Member: #119290 Location: Elk Grove, CA | ||
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My experience with typical pub bands suggests this would be an ideal lineup:
Bass: Guy Berryman (Coldplay) Piano: Tim Rice-Oxley (Keane) Drums: Tony McCarroll (Early Oasis) Guitar: Nathan Conolly (Snow Patrol) Vocals: Dido Florian Cloud de Bounevialle O'Malley Armstrong Name: The Zzz's |
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| ^ | Joined: 22 Oct 2004 Member: #45399 Location: Schmocation | ||
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Why curious? Manager's sole point of interest is to manage to make money, so I picked most popular figures on the biggest market and equipped them with instruments they can possibly handle. |
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| ^ | Joined: 01 Aug 2005 Member: #76751 Location: where butter flies | ||
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^^ actually now I see your cunning plan, I can't fault your logic Zombie Queen. Although the rattle can be quite a demanding and nuanced instrument to master (even for those with the most delicate of hands).
I like your idea Cryophonik for BIG bass (and cage dancing too Indeed Skipscada - I've sat through plenty of those pub gigs too |
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| ^ | Joined: 19 Jun 2011 Member: #259079 Location: Sendai, Japan | ||
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Paul McCartney on bass/vocals
John Lennon on guitar/vocals George Harrison lead guitar/vocals Ringo Starr on drums maybe could get Billy Preston to play a little keys every now and then.. |
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| ^ | Joined: 15 Mar 2002 Member: #2141 Location: gone riding | ||
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| ^ | Joined: 13 Nov 2006 Member: #128309 Location: in Uranus, playin' lollipop |
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