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Topic ClosedHammond Organ Extravaganza Part 1!!

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erik neuteboom View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2007 at 09:06
 
 
       WOW, so many Jon Lord fans Clap I would like to recommend this DVD to you:
 
 

JON LORD WITH THE HOOCHIE COOCHIE MEN – Live At The Basement (live 2003)

In 2003 John Lord was asked to perform at the Sydney Opera House with the Queensland Orchestra, a dream came true for him because he had always loved to play there once. He also booked a few smaller venues but unfortunately he got injured so he could hardly play the Grand piano. The contact with an old Australian friend on the bass named Bob Daisley led to the  temporary formation of Jon Lord With The Hoochie Coochie Men, this DVD is the excellent registration of a concert the band gave in 2003. As a huge fan of the Heavy Prog by Deep Purple, I was very curious to Jon Lord his role in this band. Well, it’s straight 12-bar blues (like Stevie Ray Vaughan) and Jon is clearly happy with it, he delivers an outstanding, very inspired job like many exciting solos, especially in Lonesome Traveller Blues, the classic Green Onions (swirling with great use of the drawbars) and the final song 12 Bar Blow Jam. The band plays tight (with good guitar play and pleasant work on the harmonica) and enthousiastically, in two songs there is a contribution by Jimmy Barnes. He sings very emotionally and expressive, it's very compelling to listen to the interplay between his vocals and John his bluesy Hammond organ sound. This is a DVD to check out if you like blues and the Hammond organ!
 
 
                                                        Thumbs%20Up
 
Easy Money, I read your Brian Auger "Auger's Live Oblivion Express Volume 2", for sure I am going to check it out for my Hammond article.
 
Mystic Fred, I saw Don Airey with Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow, excellent keyboardplayer and I love his Minimoog work in Colosseum II but on the Hammond he's very good too Thumbs%20Up
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2007 at 10:04
Originally posted by erik neuteboom erik neuteboom wrote:

Chicapah (and others), at this moment I am writing about Brian Auger for my Hammond article, which albums would you recommend to me? I was blown away by his 1989 Jazz Festival performance I have on a video, so many exciting solos on his Hammond B3, great build-ups and often very swirling, he's a master on the Hammond organ Clap
I must recommend that you give a listen to his work on the eclectic Streetnoise album and especially on Befour.  His solos are so electrifying that it's hard to express it in words.  My favorite Auger ride comes on their cover of Eddie Harris' "Listen Here" where he gets to romp for a good 2 or 3 minutes at the end.  His work in Oblivion Express is nothing to turn your nose up to but his unrestricted passion on those early two LPs is much like what Hendrix was doing on electric guitar to me.  The band I was with in those days had an organist (Hammond B3, of course) and, while he adored Emerson, Wakeman and Lord, he learned how to play solos by listening to Auger.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2007 at 10:25
Hey Erik, I picked Live Oblivian 2 as one of my recommended 5, so it will appear in your article already.

Hey Chicapah, I agree a lot of the early Auger has that crazy abandon and is great, I like the live Oblivian because of the pure raw sound of the keyboards and Stephen Ferrone's drumming.
By the way, you and I might know some of the same people in the Dallas music scene.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2007 at 10:49
Originally posted by Ghost Rider Ghost Rider wrote:


Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by Lady In Black Lady In Black wrote:

In my opinion JON LORD is the King of Hammond in Prog field!

 
Who do you think?


No one can play solos like Lord, especially when he was younger. Check out his solos on In Rock or Made in Japan, no one else in rock can play with that much aggression and imagination. I especially like the fact that he rarely relies on qouting other peoples material.

Listen to the jam that comes after Space Truckin on Made in Japan to hear what he is really capable of.
I second that 100%. Lord rules indeed, and he was the strongest link with prog in DP.*promises not to mention DP and Heavy Prog in the same sentence*LOL



There is a good book on progressive rock called Listening to the Future, I was amazed to find that it did not have one mention of Lord at all. I can see leaving out Purple because of all the nonsense they have put out, but ignoring Lord's contribution to progressive rock seemed like a serious oversight.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 12 2007 at 11:24

 

                          Thanks Chicapah and Easy Money Thumbs%20Up

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2007 at 14:39
 
                 This evening I am carried away by this Hammond drenched gem:
 

ACHE — De Homine Urbano + Green Man

Review by erik neuteboom (erik neuteboom)
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Symphonic Prog Expert
 
%20

3%20stars This Danish band was founded in ’68 and made two albums: “De hombre urbano (’70) and “Green man” (’71).) In 2000 both albums were released on 1 CD entitled “Ache: De hombre urbano + Green man”. The music is based upon splendid keyboardplay (many floods of Hammond organ) and some fiery electric guitar. The first album contains two ‘side- long tracks’, the atmosphere is typically end Sixties and early Seventies (the Early British Progressive Rock Movement like JULIAN’S TREATMENT, RARE BIRD, BEGGAR’S OPERA and ATOMIC ROOSTER, the German Krautrock like early JANE, ELOY, RAMSES and TRIUMVIRAT) and early Earth & Fire) with lots of soli and long, exciting interplay between guitar and keyoards, like jams. The second album includes shorter songs but the climates are in the vein of the first LP. If you listen to this CD, it’s incredible that the magnificent keyboardplay is delivered by an unknown Danish musician. Essential for Hammond organ freaks!



                 Later this week I will do some 'Brian Auger shopping' Wink
 
 
 
                           
 
 
                           Rick Van Der Linden played on this M3 model,
                           the picture I found on the Internet this evening.
 
 
 
 


Edited by erik neuteboom - November 13 2007 at 14:40
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 14 2007 at 15:34
 
  This is how the Hammond Organ Special will be published around November 21st:
 

         THE HAMMOND ORGAN

 

                   “From a poor man’s pipe organ to

                     a progrock musician's big band

 

PART ONE:
 
Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 2 : The history of the Hammond organ

Chapter 3: How does it work? By PA member Pierreolivier

Chapter 4: The heavy weighted Hammond models on the small catwalk

 
PART TWO:
 
Chapter 5: A personal Hammond story: a meeting with my hero Thijs Van
                  Leer

Chapter 6: The masters on the Hammond organ (from Jimmy Smith, Eddie

                 Hardin and Greg Rolie to Brian Auger, Reese Wynans and
                 Barbara Dennerlein)

Chapter 7:  1967-2007 Fourty years of Hammond sounds in progressive rock

 
PART THREE:
 
Chapter 8: A Hammond story by PA member and jazz specialist Dick Heath

Chapter 9: Quotes about the Hammond organ by Dutch progrock musicians

                 (from Rick van der Linden to Thijs van Leer and Ton
                 Scherpenzeel)

Chapter 10: My favorite Hammond organ drenched CD’s and DVD’s

 
PART FOUR:
 
Chapter 11: PA members about the Hammond organ and their favorite
                   Hammond Albums: Jim Garten, Ozzy Tom, Jimmy Row, Easy
                   Money, Rivertree and Dalt99)

Chapter 12: This is not a Hammond organ! (about the Farfisa, Gibson and

                    Vox Continental organs)

Chapter 13: Sources of information

Chapter 14: Interesting links

 

One of my favorite Hammond organ drenched albums:

                 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 14 2007 at 15:53
sheesh, you weren't messing around when you decided to put this togetherLOL like I said, looking forward to it...
 
btw, I'm glad you liked Barbara Dennerlein, you really have to watch her play to get the full experience of how talented she is, I was blown away the first time I saw a video of her all-out hammond mastery.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 14 2007 at 16:05
 
        Hello Jimmy, did you already play on my birthday present to you LOL?
 
Barbara Dennerlein is an exciting discovery, on one blues solo on her Best Of compilation CD she switches on the drawbars, incredible, what a blend of technique and emotion Thumbs%20Up
Later this evening I will watch an Atomic Rooster DVD and a DVD with Santana, Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane on one evening in San Fransisco in 1970, lots of Hammond to enjoy the forthcoming hours! Reviews follow tomorrow.


Edited by erik neuteboom - November 14 2007 at 16:06
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 14 2007 at 16:28

Approvesounds like quite a line up you have there.  I'm a huge fan of Greg Rolie's work on the organ, some of the best tones you'll hear (...and don't forget early Journey before they became...Dead), and don't get me started on the Dead, I'll assume it's Pigpen eraClap

I wish I could play that wonderful birthday present but I'm afraid that my musical ablilities are confined to loud Peter Hammill impersonationsStern%20SmileLOL

 
...we are the looooost oooones, we are the pioneeeers!...
 
um, maybe I should just take up flute...less complaints from the neighborsPinch
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erik neuteboom View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 14 2007 at 16:49
In my Hammond Special I have lots of room for Gregg Rolie and also for early Journey. I remember that I had an arguement on the Forum with somebody who bashed at Journey. When I asked his opinion about their first 3 albums he admitted that he had never heard of early Journey, he was only familiar with 'Steve Perry Journey' Dead I have seen Journey two times, in 1978 on the annual Dutch Pinkpop Festival (excellent work by Neil Schon and Gregg Rolie) and in 1980 when Steve Perry was just added to the band, they played with the decibels of Seventies Deep Purple Shocked
Another amazing Hammond master to check out is Santana member Chester Thompson, see my reviews about the DVD's Sacred Fire and Live At Loreley!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 14 2007 at 19:19
Gregg Rolie a "master"?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 15 2007 at 04:19
 
                                       Greg Rolie A MASTER Thumbs%20Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 15 2007 at 08:01
Originally posted by erik neuteboom erik neuteboom wrote:

 

                                       Greg Rolie A MASTER Thumbs%20Up


Not to mention Tom Coster..

My own meager contribution nears completion, Erik - with youvery soon

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 15 2007 at 08:28
 
                     OK Jim, thanks in advance and I am  looking forward to it Thumbs%20Up 
 
It's incredible how many Hammond masters Carlos Santana had in his band, from Gregg Rolie and Tom Coster to Chester Thompson, they all will be mentioned in my Hammond Organ Special.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 15 2007 at 09:07
Originally posted by Jim Garten Jim Garten wrote:

Originally posted by erik neuteboom erik neuteboom wrote:

 

                                       Greg Rolie A MASTER Thumbs%20Up


Not to mention Tom Coster..

My own meager contribution nears completion, Erik - with youvery soon
 
Tom Coster is definitely a Master (generally overall keyboards) but I'm not so sure I'd classify Gregg Rolie a Master.  Especially when compared to the acknowledged kings (and queens) of the Hammond organ.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 15 2007 at 09:40
I am sure Dwill 123 Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 15 2007 at 11:09
Just a quick note to you, Eric.  I've gotten through the best of Oblivion Express now and I'd have to recommend their heavy debut over the rest of OE's catalogue.  They get progressively MOR as they go along.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 15 2007 at 11:27
Originally posted by Chicapah Chicapah wrote:

Just a quick note to you, Eric.  I've gotten through the best of Oblivion Express now and I'd have to recommend their heavy debut over the rest of OE's catalogue.  They get progressively MOR as they go along.


Hi Chicapah, as a long time Auger fan I have to agree 100% with that. It is very hard to find any jazz fusion artists that didn't decline in the mid to late 70s.
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erik neuteboom View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 15 2007 at 13:26
Well Chicapah, thanks and I would like to have your permission to publish some quotes from you in my Hammond Special, is this OK (from two of your Brian Auger reviews)? I presume fellow Hammond freak Easy Money has no problem, I will also use some of his quotes Wink
 
Today I published a review on the homepage about Atomic Rooster their DVD entitled The Ultimate Anthology, it contains some very exciting Hammond organ work by the late Vince Crane, especially in the trio-line up with John Du Cann and Paul Hammond Thumbs%20Up
 
By the way, why you USA citizens always write Eric instead of Erik (derived from Norwegian Erik The Viking LOL )?
 
 
 


Edited by erik neuteboom - November 15 2007 at 13:27
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