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Cactus Choir
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 26 2008
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 09:06 |
M27Barney wrote:
Wakeman was middle class! - he had Piano lessons. |
So having piano lessons makes you a toff then? Fair enough. Perhaps I've just been fooled by Rick's Cockerney accent.
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"And now...on the drums...Mick Underwooooooooood!!!"
"He's up the pub"
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 22 2004
Location: England
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Points: 16130
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 10:58 |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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halabalushindigus
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Location: San Diego
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 11:08 |
There is an army of ants outside milling around, so I've decided to play "Iconoclast" to make them "happy"
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assume the power 1586/14.3
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Cactus Choir
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 11:15 |
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"And now...on the drums...Mick Underwooooooooood!!!"
"He's up the pub"
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The T
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 12:26 |
I'm also crying and my stomach burns after reading that... I hope one day you suffer from humilliation for having said that...
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TODDLER
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 12:35 |
Emerson was bashed plain and simple for the theatrics on stage. Which many great musicians follow this path like Ian Anderson but, sometimes later in life looking upon it as a foolish act and wish never to return to it. Quite like Peter Gabriel wishing not to re-live his past with Genesis. To observe the attitudes of the YES fan verses the ELP fan, which in the 70's was a disease that infested everybody it seemed, is quite ridiculous to even think about .......But in fact it is the reason for ELP bashings to rule the universe today. It's a mentality that developed over decades. When I listen to Beggars Opera, Rare Bird, and various other prog bands from the early 70's, I can plainly hear the most obvious influences of Keith Emerson with the Nice. Graham Field was an outstanding player but I don't think I was very fond of all the artists that emulated the Emerson style and sound. Emerson had such a huge impact on European musicians during that magical early 70's period. For the longest time, people tried endlessly to either play like him? or emulate his synth sounds and not so much his structure. The history of this is indeed fascinating to me due to how Emerson was followed and worshipped by European musicians. He was an icon to many young progressive musicians that hailed from the ranks of other prog bands. Especially in the early 70's Nice period.
In the late 70's there were a huge amount of outstanding keyboardists in the Philadelphia area that were highly influenced by Keith Emerson. As a musician, I can honestly say that back in the 70's Keith Emerson had all great musicians doing their homework. In music college there was a mentality about Carl Palmer being a great diverse drummer of amazing speed but, played in a rock band which was shameful.
It was basically a jazz snob concept that developed when Carl Palmer turned up in the media playing wild drum solos. These people were part of a club. I couldn't believe how many anti-Carl Palmer musicians there were. These types of social outbreaks were at that period in time crucial to the image of ELP.
All these examples that I give when anyalized, are of a percentage of groups that were for one reason or the other, anti-ELP. During the 70's when this type of behaviour was spreading a disease, it consisted mainly with musicians. For whatever reason? Jealousy maybe? It couldn't have been the large percent of hard rock fans from the early 70's, which it might enter your mind that it would be. It's maybe difficult to get the visual on a kid from the early 70's who listens to Humble Pie, Foghat, Jimi Hendrix and Black Sabbath that is running down the block screaming ....I've got my ELP tickets! As a house rule (so to speak), many kids from the early 70's that collected hard rock were not too fond of European prog. But most kids allowed ELP to creep in and as a result many hard rock fans enjoyed ELP more than their rock heroes. I remember kids trying to dance to the strange time signatures and.....I mean it was just very strange. All the parties kids would have when they would play mostly hard rock and there came this special moment where everyone would sit for ELP. I found that to be a fine experience. I'm not being extreme here....just honest.
For whatever these thousands of kids took ELP to be, or to identify with was beyond me. It wasn't always about the rapid structure of notes. There was just something about the band in 72' that caused people to investigate. I used to think maybe it was the marketing concept that the name...Emerson, Lake & Palmer was used in the same fashion as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. Many people who were fans of top 40...like maybe ....Linda Ronstadt, The Carpenters, etc....were hypnotized by the name, bought the records and became huge fans. In the music business various female pianists..folk/singer songwriter artists loved Keith Emerson's piano work. These groups of people hardly ventured into other prog...just Keith. ELP really reached top 40 people big time with TRILOGY. Talk about extreme measures? How ELP reached this many groups of people I will never know. They were somehow inspired. It's not a point of one specific crowd regarding the popularity of ELP. They had musicians doing their homework and fans following them around the globe.
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arnoldlayne
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Location: United Kingdom
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 14:04 |
Personally I only have the Works albums - aside from that I really like 'Take A Pebble' and 'Lucky Man' from the debut. I can't see the problem with ELP, aside from the fact that Keith Emerson does come across as a bit of a t**ser, but like that matters when you're listening to the music! Roger Waters is hardly a cuddly bunny, but I practically worship the ground he stamps his curmudgeonly feet on! When compared to their contemporaries, ELP probably do suffer a bit, but then in my opinion that is some serious competition - Yes, Genesis, Floyd, Zep, Crim, Christ, even Bowie were all on a blinding roll in the first half of the 70s. Bet I've forgotten someone there...
I think a previous poster had it right when they said it's part of the cultural landscape (certainly in Britain) that thou shalt mock ELP as widdly-diddly folly peddlers who are never to be trusted. Prog might be rehabilitated a bit these days (when I first heard Floyd back in the 80s they were soooo uncool, but now of course everybody loves em!!) but ELP might always be the embarrasing example naysayers will use without even having listened to the music.
There's the key...how many haters actually listen to it to find out?
Exactly.
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lazland
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 28 2008
Location: Wales
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Points: 13634
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 14:05 |
To answer the original question, there is nothing wrong with ELP, and people who have cited their huge influence on many bands of both the era and later are spot on.
The trouble with fandom is that it almost always, with a significant minority, descends into a who's better than who argument, which is pretty pointless given that this is all subjective anyway.
For my money, ELP simply did or do not give me as much pleasure as my favourite prog bands, and from the era, I always far preferred the output of bands such as Genesis, Yes, Floyd, Crimson, Tull & etc. That is not to say there is anything wrong with ELP, I just wasn't particularly keen on them. As for the accusation of being bombastic & overblown, this is the silly charge laid against virtually every prog act by a majority of journalists & critics since about 1977. I learned to ignore tosh such as that years ago.
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Enhance your life. Get down to www.lazland.org
Now also broadcasting on www.progzilla.com Every Saturday, 4.00 p.m. UK time!
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richardh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 18 2004
Location: United Kingdom
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Points: 28064
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 15:43 |
arnoldlayne wrote:
Personally I only have the Works albums - aside from that I really like 'Take A Pebble' and 'Lucky Man' from the debut. I can't see the problem with ELP, aside from the fact that Keith Emerson does come across as a bit of a t**ser, but like that matters when you're listening to the music! Roger Waters is hardly a cuddly bunny, but I practically worship the ground he stamps his curmudgeonly feet on! When compared to their contemporaries, ELP probably do suffer a bit, but then in my opinion that is some serious competition - Yes, Genesis, Floyd, Zep, Crim, Christ, even Bowie were all on a blinding roll in the first half of the 70s. Bet I've forgotten someone there...
I think a previous poster had it right when they said it's part of the cultural landscape (certainly in Britain) that thou shalt mock ELP as widdly-diddly folly peddlers who are never to be trusted. Prog might be rehabilitated a bit these days (when I first heard Floyd back in the 80s they were soooo uncool, but now of course everybody loves em!!) but ELP might always be the embarrasing example naysayers will use without even having listened to the music.
There's the key...how many haters actually listen to it to find out?
Exactly. |
Yes someone has to occupy the position of the prog band that should always be bashed and ELP are a nice big target.If ELP didn't exist then presumably someone else would have got it in the neck.
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uduwudu
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 17 2007
Status: Offline
Points: 2601
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 17:00 |
TODDLER wrote:
. In music college there was a mentality about Carl Palmer being a great diverse drummer of amazing speed but, played in a rock band which was shameful.
It was basically a jazz snob concept that developed when Carl Palmer turned up in the media playing wild drum solos. These people were part of a club. I couldn't believe how many anti-Carl Palmer musicians there were. These types of social outbreaks were at that period in time crucial to the image of ELP.
All these examples that I give when anyalized, are of a percentage of groups that were for one reason or the other, anti-ELP. During the 70's when this type of behaviour was spreading a disease, it consisted mainly with musicians. For whatever reason? Jealousy maybe?
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Snobbery knew no bounds. Even Leonard Bernstein used to wind Emerson up 'Oh, Keith's writing a Piano Concerto,' in sarky tone. I think one of the problems is that most genres of music are supposed to do something that other genres cannot do. So when a rock band features stunning drumming, rock is only supposed to reflect teen angst, not be a vehicle for great musicianship. Put that man in his place, Rock is the only form of music where you can be criticised negatively for playing fantastically. Jazz looks down on rock becuase most rock well, it is uneducated and probably technically inferior to most jazz. This is a bit snobby as both musics do what they ares supposed to. Jazz accepts (for the most part) musical progression. Rock only does so whenever it is fashionable (the pop side). I mean prog to punk - hip hop is hardly musical progression in terms of sophistication. But rock is not about musical sophistication so when this phenomena turns up there is a pile up of voices. You may have borne witness to the Dream Theater posts on this site. If DT were less sophisticated there would not be such wondering if DT were prog rock vs straight metal. This is just an example not a prompt to extend that debate here btw. Aaron Copeland liked the full treatment Palmer and Lake played of Fanfare (KE just played him the single version which he thought sucked - not adventurious enough. IMHO this was a great tune for the radio - wonder how it would um, fare now if released? ELP were a huge concert draw. Vastly ambitious and played their hearts out. This may have contributed to Emerson's hand problems I wonder? Too much touring, the demands on him were that of a concert pianist and he had the thatrics. Of course if they had sat around "just playing" they would have been sl*gged off for that. You can't win. (Unless you like their music and can hear and listen to it.)
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Ronnie Pilgrim
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Joined: February 09 2010
Location: The South of TX
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Points: 771
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 19:23 |
TODDLER wrote:
Which many great musicians follow this path like Ian Anderson but, sometimes later in life looking upon it as a foolish act and wish never to return to it.
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I would love for you to expound on this.
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TODDLER
Forum Senior Member
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Joined: August 28 2009
Location: Vineland, N.J.
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 21:29 |
Ronnie Pilgrim wrote:
TODDLER wrote:
Which many great musicians follow this path like Ian Anderson but, sometimes later in life looking upon it as a foolish act and wish never to return to it.
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I would love for you to expound on this.
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I once had an interview cassette tape where Ian Anderson states ....."I can no longer be the Ian Anderson that I was back in 1972......spinning and jumping around on stage. Wearing tights and various clothing that looks quite silly to me now.
Maybe he had a few too many to drink when he said all of this? Maybe he changed his viewpoint since then? This was decades ago on a cassette tape given to me by a record store owner.
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jammun
Prog Reviewer
Joined: July 14 2007
Location: United States
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Points: 3449
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Posted: March 16 2010 at 22:01 |
Okay, I've had a few beers and feel compelled to defend ELP. First, let's put rock and roll keyboards into perspective.
In the beginning was Little Richard (and I suppose Jerry Lee Lewis...but I'm trying to be brief). Little Richard was flamboyant, rarely just sitting at his piano playing, though of course he did that, just hyperactively. He was, besides an excellent rock pianist (not to mention songwriter), a showman.
As rock wended its way into the '60s, well the ol' keyboard player was not quite so popular. In fact I can't think of a single rock keyboard player who attained any status early on. After The Beatles hit (I'm talking in the U.S.), well they didn't exactly feature any keyboard player. The British Invasion bands, with the notable exceptions of The Dave Clark Five and The Animals, didn't really bring along a keyboard player, did they?
As those bands grew, and their influence either waxed or waned, well keyboards, especially the Vox Continental, became a bit more popular. But again look at the bands with significant keyboard influence: ? and the Mysterians; Sir Douglas Quintet; Zombies; Sam the Sham & the Pharoahs. I'm leaving out many, but all of these had significant organ-driven songs. So the keyboard as a lead rock instrument had been re-established. Now as we move into say 1966, they organ becomes still more accepted. The Young Rascals and Paul Revere & The Raiders come to mind. And once we move into the 'psychedelic' era, the organ continues to be an integral part of many a band (early Grateful Dead, early Steve Miller Band, early Country Joe & The Fish, and the British counterparts, um, The Nice with that dude Emerson.).
Now, guitar still reigns supreme. Clapton, Hendrix, Beck & Page with the Yardbirds. They get the press. They're up there on stage, doin' the moves, playing the music.
Emerson is no idiot. He's a young guy, wants to be a star. He's gotta be thinking, why can't I get the press? He's gotta be thinking, why can't I be the Hendrix of the Hammond organ? Maybe rock my little L3 back and forth, maybe stick knives in the keys, put on a show. He's gotta be thinking, rightly I believe, I'm the finest rock organist out here. Why should I just sit on that bench and play? If Hendrix can light his guitar on fire, if Townshend can smash his to oblivion, well why not reach. Why let them get all the glory? It'll get some press. And lo, it was true.
Let's be realistic. The Nice, a good band, was never destined for stardom, not with that singer. So why not hook up with Lake and Palmer, good pedigrees both. Why not make that first ELP album? Which basically is the equivalent of Led Zep's debut, or Hendrix's debut...yes, I'm warping the timeline a bit here.
And with success, and with new electronics just coming into existence (the Moog synth), why would he not grab onto that technology, and milk it for all it was worth? And yes eventually the theatrics, which had an absolutely legit purpose early on (bring the keyboard player up to status with the very best guitarists), would get the best of it, considering that Elton was perhaps the competition in that realm.
In the end, ELP get a little to full of themselves. Not the first artists that's happened to. I still say, for a period there, Emerson was the man and his influence is widely felt in, and bascially responsible for, pretty much any band, at least those that have keyboards, that's on this site. Obviously, we're all free to like or dislike their albums. Check my reviews. I have issues with all of them; I'm not a pure fanboy. But at their best, well ELP are in a class of their own.
And if you'll tolerate a couple of metaphors...
I think it was Icarus who flew a bit too close to the sun. Ya can't blame the guy for trying.
And I think it was Sisyphus who kept trying to roll that rock up the hill. Ya can only roll that rock so far, before the rock will roll over you.
Edited by jammun - March 16 2010 at 22:13
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Can you tell me where we're headin'?
Lincoln County Road or Armageddon.
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halabalushindigus
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 05 2009
Location: San Diego
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Points: 1438
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Posted: March 17 2010 at 00:26 |
^excellent
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assume the power 1586/14.3
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Sacred 22
Forum Senior Member
Joined: March 24 2006
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Points: 1509
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Posted: March 17 2010 at 00:54 |
ELP is like Genesis to me. I loved both bands in the 70's as a young guy but today being 2010 and me being considerably older; both bands have lost their collective appeal to me. Oh, I still listen as I prefer random play these days to specific play. I guess the lack of guitar and Emerson's disdain for the Mellotron are a couple of reasons but having said that, ELP still appeals to me as a band I like to listen to now and again.
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halabalushindigus
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Posted: March 17 2010 at 01:22 |
There is nothing wrong w/ E LP
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assume the power 1586/14.3
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richardh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 18 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 28064
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Posted: March 17 2010 at 02:47 |
uduwudu wrote:
TODDLER wrote:
. In music college there was a mentality about Carl Palmer being a great diverse drummer of amazing speed but, played in a rock band which was shameful.
It was basically a jazz snob concept that developed when Carl Palmer turned up in the media playing wild drum solos. These people were part of a club. I couldn't believe how many anti-Carl Palmer musicians there were. These types of social outbreaks were at that period in time crucial to the image of ELP.
All these examples that I give when anyalized, are of a percentage of groups that were for one reason or the other, anti-ELP. During the 70's when this type of behaviour was spreading a disease, it consisted mainly with musicians. For whatever reason? Jealousy maybe?
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Snobbery knew no bounds. Even Leonard Bernstein used to wind Emerson up 'Oh, Keith's writing a Piano Concerto,' in sarky tone.
I think one of the problems is that most genres of music are supposed to do something that other genres cannot do. So when a rock band features stunning drumming, rock is only supposed to reflect teen angst, not be a vehicle for great musicianship. Put that man in his place, Rock is the only form of music where you can be criticised negatively for playing fantastically.
Jazz looks down on rock becuase most rock well, it is uneducated and probably technically inferior to most jazz. This is a bit snobby as both musics do what they ares supposed to. Jazz accepts (for the most part) musical progression. Rock only does so whenever it is fashionable (the pop side). I mean prog to punk - hip hop is hardly musical progression in terms of sophistication. But rock is not about musical sophistication so when this phenomena turns up there is a pile up of voices.
You may have borne witness to the Dream Theater posts on this site. If DT were less sophisticated there would not be such wondering if DT were prog rock vs straight metal. This is just an example not a prompt to extend that debate here btw.
Aaron Copeland liked the full treatment Palmer and Lake played of Fanfare (KE just played him the single version which he thought sucked - not adventurious enough. IMHO this was a great tune for the radio - wonder how it would um, fare now if released?
ELP were a huge concert draw. Vastly ambitious and played their hearts out. This may have contributed to Emerson's hand problems I wonder? Too much touring, the demands on him were that of a concert pianist and he had the thatrics. Of course if they had sat around "just playing" they would have been sl*gged off for that. You can't win. (Unless you like their music and can hear and listen to it.)
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You mention that Leonard Bernstein used to wind up Emerson. I expect you are aware of the anecdote in Emersons autobiography 'Pictures At An Exhibitionist' when Bernstein was invited into the studio to listen to ELP's then new recording 'Pirates' of which Emerson was justifiably proud of.Bernstein as usual was not impressed. Greg Lake was also there and Bernstein started comparing himself to Beethoven (or some major classical composer) .Not sure of the exact words but Lake chimed in with ''Don't worry Lenny no one is going to confuse your music with Beethoven''. Emerson nearly died on the spot
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uduwudu
Forum Senior Member
Joined: July 17 2007
Status: Offline
Points: 2601
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Posted: March 17 2010 at 03:03 |
[/QUOTE]
You mention that Leonard Bernstein used to wind up Emerson. I expect you are aware of the anecdote in Emersons autobiography 'Pictures At An Exhibitionist' when Bernstein was invited into the studio to listen to ELP's then new recording 'Pirates' of which Emerson was justifiably proud of.Bernstein as usual was not impressed. Greg Lake was also there and Bernstein started comparing himself to Beethoven (or some major classical composer) .Not sure of the exact words but Lake chimed in with ''Don't worry Lenny no one is going to confuse your music with Beethoven''. Emerson nearly died on the spot [/QUOTE] I think I might've read that - quoted somewhere anyway, ELP list? Hilarious, I love things like that!
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M27Barney
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 09 2006
Location: Swinton M27
Status: Offline
Points: 3136
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Posted: March 17 2010 at 05:10 |
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Certif1ed
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
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Points: 7559
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Posted: March 17 2010 at 05:59 |
jammun wrote:
As rock wended its way into the '60s, well the ol' keyboard player was not quite so popular. In fact I can't think of a single rock keyboard player who attained any status early on. After The Beatles hit (I'm talking in the U.S.), well they didn't exactly feature any keyboard player. The British Invasion bands, with the notable exceptions of The Dave Clark Five and The Animals, didn't really bring along a keyboard player, did they?
As those bands grew, and their influence either waxed or waned, well keyboards, especially the Vox Continental, became a bit more popular. But again look at the bands with significant keyboard influence: ? and the Mysterians; Sir Douglas Quintet; Zombies; Sam the Sham & the Pharoahs. I'm leaving out many, but all of these had significant organ-driven songs. So the keyboard as a lead rock instrument had been re-established.
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The organ had popularity in jazz circles, didn't it?
Jimmy Smith is first to spring to mind, Booker T and the MGs and Wynder K Frogg.
In Blues rock, Graham Bond's ORGANisation surely made some impact - I've seen (albeit rather cheesey) TV clips of them predating 1965.
I know you're not trying to be completist - but these names are big... and I've probably missed loads!
jammun wrote:
Now as we move into say 1966, they organ becomes still more accepted. The Young Rascals and Paul Revere & The Raiders come to mind. And once we move into the 'psychedelic' era, the organ continues to be an integral part of many a band (early Grateful Dead, early Steve Miller Band, early Country Joe & The Fish, and the British counterparts, um, The Nice with that dude Emerson.).
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Not forgetting the Doors, of course... and later, Art/Spooky Tooth and Pink Floyd.
jammun wrote:
Now, guitar still reigns supreme. Clapton, Hendrix, Beck & Page with the Yardbirds. They get the press. They're up there on stage, doin' the moves, playing the music.
Emerson is no idiot. He's a young guy, wants to be a star. He's gotta be thinking, why can't I get the press? He's gotta be thinking, why can't I be the Hendrix of the Hammond organ? Maybe rock my little L3 back and forth, maybe stick knives in the keys, put on a show. He's gotta be thinking, rightly I believe, I'm the finest rock organist out here. Why should I just sit on that bench and play? If Hendrix can light his guitar on fire, if Townshend can smash his to oblivion, well why not reach. Why let them get all the glory? It'll get some press. And lo, it was true.
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There's some fairly persuasive argument from organ trio Clouds' camp that their early incarnation, 1-2-3 (who had residency at the Marquee during 1967) first brought the organ to the forefront, particularly with Billy Ritchie's habit of standing at the organ, and playing both it and the piano at the same time, seamlessly incorporating jazz, and not at all seamlessly incoporating Classical music - and allegory that Emerson only formed The Nice after seeing 1-2-3 perform. Before that, he played in P.P.Arnold's backing band and dreamed the dream.
I'm probably nitpicking on the side of completeness, but I think the bands I mentioned are important in context - otherwise it's a good story, and sums up ELP's position really well.
I'm really interested to hear any comments about Clouds/1-2-3 from anyone that actually remembers them, as I have some contact with the band.
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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