just don't expect pc world to be happy about it.
Unfashionable - but who cares?
- KVRAF
- 4760 posts since 26 Apr, 2002 from the bogely factory
yeah,the nice 'rocked'.dirtier than ELP,pre-moog,keith used to tip his hammond onto it's corner(no mean feat)and rock it to get all those wierd noises.hammond got cross with him 'abusing' there precious and refused to fix it anymore!you don't get that these days with all these well behaved bands.
so come on kids start swingin yer cpu round on stage,that'll get em goin.
just don't expect pc world to be happy about it.
just don't expect pc world to be happy about it.
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- KVRist
- 360 posts since 27 Jul, 2004 from Cologne/Germany
Yes, "Aqualung" ist still one of my favourite records.aMUSEd wrote:I'm thinking of looking out some Jethro Tull nextI had some records of theirs but lost them ages ago.
Regards,
Tommy
Some music here
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- KVRAF
- 4222 posts since 23 Feb, 2004 from Tucson Arizona USA
Al Goff did a better job of fixing them anyway.spacedad wrote:hammond got cross with him 'abusing' there precious and refused to fix it anymore!
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- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
Never heard The Nice play America, but Yes did a version that Simon and Garfunkel would never have recognized. :-D In fact, it's the rendition I knew first. When I heard the S&G version I was sooo surprised...
(This is assuming you don't mean "America the Beautiful.")
(This is assuming you don't mean "America the Beautiful.")
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- KVRist
- 360 posts since 27 Jul, 2004 from Cologne/Germany
Actually it's from "West Side Story" (L.Bernstein/S.Sondheim). Trini Lopez did a very successful version, too.Meffy wrote:Never heard The Nice play America, but Yes did a version that Simon and Garfunkel would never have recognized.In fact, it's the rendition I knew first. When I heard the S&G version I was sooo surprised...
(This is assuming you don't mean "America the Beautiful.")
Regards,
Tommy
Some music here
- something special
- 8630 posts since 16 Mar, 2002 from Birmingham, Alabama
stand-up and benefitaMUSEd wrote:I'm thinking of looking out some Jethro Tull nextI had some records of theirs but lost them ages ago.
were among my most played albums in my teenage years
and that's not to say, that I don't still love them - I do!
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- KVRist
- 360 posts since 27 Jul, 2004 from Cologne/Germany
Yes did record "America"? I'm by no means in expert, in fact I couldn't (can't) stand them. Hmm ... really can't remember them playing that tuneMeffy wrote:Ah, that "America."Gotcha. The proto-Yes version interpolates the theme from that one (on organ) IIRC.
But I remember shelling out some serious money for "Tales Of Topographic Oceans" - yes it was a lot of money for me at that time. I still have the album but I'm pretty sure that I never managed to listen through the complete album
Wouldn't it be boring if we all shared the same taste?
Regards,
Tommy
Some music here
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- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
Different tastes: Yah you betcha. I like Yes, even Tales. Don't listen to it very often but when I do it's all in one long stretch.
Yes' version of Simon and Garfunkel's "America" was very VERY early -- might be on their first album?* -- and doesn't sound at all like their later ultra-cosmic work. Much more rock, not as much roll. Tony Kaye really shows off on the organ on some of the early stuff...
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* It's definitely on the "Yesterdays" collection. Might have been recorded around the time of the original album named "Yes" (or even earlier) but not included on it. Not sure about that.
[edit] Yup, a bit of googling shows that "Yesterdays" contains material from before their first album.
Yes' version of Simon and Garfunkel's "America" was very VERY early -- might be on their first album?* -- and doesn't sound at all like their later ultra-cosmic work. Much more rock, not as much roll. Tony Kaye really shows off on the organ on some of the early stuff...
________________________
* It's definitely on the "Yesterdays" collection. Might have been recorded around the time of the original album named "Yes" (or even earlier) but not included on it. Not sure about that.
[edit] Yup, a bit of googling shows that "Yesterdays" contains material from before their first album.
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- KVRian
- 1112 posts since 17 Jul, 2003 from Kauai, HI
The Wilson sisters were on "Soundstage" on PBS last night. I wish I could have watched it all--what I saw was excellent.
Tom
Tom
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- KVRAF
- 2830 posts since 2 Mar, 2003 from The only civilized county in Texas
"Thick as a brick" is one of my guilty pleasures. Which I play on CD, while reading the newspaper that was part of the LP cover.j_T wrote:Yes, "Aqualung" ist still one of my favourite records.aMUSEd wrote:I'm thinking of looking out some Jethro Tull nextI had some records of theirs but lost them ages ago.
I really have to buy a new pickup for my turn table these days ...
CDs are really the death of cover art.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 37510 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
Yeah that's a real pity. One of the great things about those early YES, Greenslade, Tull, King Crimson, E,L & P etc etc albums was the great cover art - real works of art many of them. CD's are too small to make the art interesting - I suppose video's are a way of compensation for some artists though (e.g. Bjork, UNKLE)TennesseeVic wrote:CDs are really the death of cover art.
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- KVRist
- 360 posts since 27 Jul, 2004 from Cologne/Germany
"Cover by Hypgnosis" - sometimes even more interesting than the record itself.aMUSEd wrote:Yeah that's a real pity. One of the great things about those early YES, Greenslade, Tull, King Crimson, E,L & P etc etc albums was the great cover art - real works of art many of them. CD's are too small to make the art interesting - I suppose video's are a way of compensation for some artists though (e.g. Bjork, UNKLE)TennesseeVic wrote:CDs are really the death of cover art.
Regards,
Tommy
Some music here
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- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
More covers by Roger Dean: Osibisa, Uriah Heep, Greenslade, and various Yes-subsets (such as Steve Howe's albums and Jon Anderson's uber-cosmoidal epic "Olias of Sunhillow").
He did more albums but I didn't get any of those.
He did more albums but I didn't get any of those.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 37510 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
I love the Greenslade "Time and Tide" cover by Patrick Woodruffe (one of my favourite albums too and with "More" by Pink Floyd one of the first that converted me to listening to prog rock - before that I was all classical and jazz).