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Mickeyboro

⭐Supporting Member⭐
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Everything posted by Mickeyboro

  1. How much latitude is allowed? Would we be happy if Sabbath did reggae versions of their ‘classics’ f’rinstance? Easier perhaps to not play hits that are millstones. Saw Procol Harum once and they refused to play A Whiter Shade’… Better than the jazz reworking if Woodstock by Matthews Southern Comfort and a bizarre demolition if Sylvia by Jan Akkerman!
  2. https://www.facebook.com/groups/787006954837176/permalink/2181590765378781/
  3. As a funny ps, I introduced ‘Tulsa Time’ at our last gig as an Eric Clapton song. Digging deeper I found it wasn’t. Then I found a version by its writer…
  4. Three-hour gig with the Otis Jay Blues Band in Bournemouth. Singer-harmonica player in Japan so we had two deps for the price of one! Not to mention a guest sax player… All good clean fun. PS: Sandberg VM4 through Elf plus Barefaced One10. Plenty loud!
  5. I went to see the Zombies, whom I love, on Wednesday. They played a trio of songs from Odessey and Oracle that was genuinely heart-stopping. They then went on to do a 15-minute version of Hold Your Head Up, not even a Zombies song of course though written by Rod Argent, and ended with a version of She’s Not There that featured a four-minute heavy metal guitar solo. And no, it wasn’t even the Santana version. Given the show was less than 90 mins in total, I would have preferred four more songs. I blame their recent success in the States; last time I looked, Wimborne Tivoli is not a basketball arena. My point, I suppose, is: having created classic songs, do bands have an absolute right to ruin them?
  6. I have just learned that Nigel passed away earlier today. If you have memories of him to share, please feel free to do so on this thread. Lovely fella, I am a bit cut up at the moment.
  7. Yet again! Third time as lucky as the others…
  8. My first proper electric was a sunburst right-hander. Wish I had kept it!
  9. New book - £9.99 inc postage Behind: Autobiography of a Musical Shapeshifter by Jimmy Ryan.
  10. And another flawless transaction!
  11. Yeah, I am dithering. Expensive tix, a Sunday and I ain’t got anyone to go with😕
  12. Have seen them several times but never as good as in 1976. Absolutely amazing - oh for a time machine
  13. You’re right re SC one-cab wonder. I had one, but 2xOne10 gives me the option to travel light… on the bus to rehearsal, even.
  14. Two cabs and you wouldn’t need PA support - I never have!
  15. A lot depends on what you put through it…
  16. Blimey - I hope you didn’t need a chiropractor! My neck twinged in sympathy… Great story, thanks for sharing.
  17. A book, sir! The desire for adulation is a light that never goes out. We live in a culture obsessed by the notion of fame - the heedless pursuit of it; the almost obligatory subsequent fallout. But what's it like to actually achieve it, and what happens when fame abruptly passes, and shifts, as it does, onto someone else? This is the point at which pop stars are at their most heroic, because they don't give up. They keep on striving, keep making music, and refuse simply to ebb away. Some sustain themselves on the nostalgia circuit, others continue to beaver away in the studio, no longer Abbey Road, perhaps, so much as the garden shed. But all of them, in their own individual ways, still dare to dream. Exit Stage Left features tales of drug addiction, bankruptcy, depression and divorce, but also of optimism, a genuine love of the craft, humility and hope. This is a candid, laugh-out-loud and occasionally shocking look at what happens when the brightest stars fall back down to earth.
  18. Just had v pleasurable transition of DVDs with Chezz. Top man!
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