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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 08:31
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

I have this from my source;

"When the Premiers (the band's name before 1-2-3) were taken to London to record by Cyril Stapleton, the engineer at Radio Luxembourg, Stewart 'Stu' Francis had also worked at Levy studios and had a tape of Paul Simon, who had recorded there in 1965. Stu became a friend of the band, and was present at all the London gigs during the 1-2-3 years. Out of the recordings, Billy (Ritchie) chose 'The Sound of Silence' and 'America'. Hence 1-2-3 played both in 1966, some two years before the world was aware of them."
 
 
Does this story ring true? Sure, bands were picking up on the likesDylan, e.g. from bootleg recordings that  were to become the Basement Tapes, but Dylan was the guv'nor, universally known. Why would Paul Simon, known in the limited Biritish folk circles,  be picked out from allsorts of demos, to be played to a yet to be successful British pop group?????????????
 
S&G established themselves with the song "Sound of Silence" among the same folk/rock cirles as Dylan - but they an were up and coming act in 1966, despite having worked for many, many years previously. Notably, S&G used Dylan's backing band for "Sound of Silence" (the LP).
 
Recording sessions for "Bookends" started in 1966 (at Levys Studios) - or at least, material that ended up on Bookends was recorded from the autumn of 1966 through to January 1968
 
1-2-3, or the Premiers, as they were then known, were up and coming - Cyril Stapleton was well known in easy-listening circles and probably had some influence on the decision - this nice, wholesome unheard-of American duo wrote great songs, while the Premiers had real problems writing their own material, but had a certain style in their playing.
 
 
This is obviously my own personal guesswork, not an attempt to put spin on the story, rather ekeing out the few strands of credibility that are in it.
 
I see the holes in the story too - and there are so many little inconsistencies in the detail; On the date I've been given for the recording, there was no gig at the Marquee - but there was one a few days earlier (or later - can't be bothered to check - the point is, the date is wrong).
 
Clouds' website also claims a "headline residency" at the Marquee, yet the flyers I've found from the time put 1-2-3 in the middle of a fairly long list for the closest date, and support slots at best for later in the year.
 
 
 
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

  Thanks for sharing the recording, you asked for some feedback so here it is: I've been playing kybds professionally for 20 plus years and have listened to all kinds of kybdsts in that time. Billie's playing is OK, but his timing is very rushed, which probably cut him from a lot of pro work other than playing his own music. I think his tastes are very corny and his musical pastiches have no logic except look at what I can do. He sounds a lot like guys who work in music stores. Unfortunately its that kind of 'everything and the kitchen sink' musical style that mars a lot of Emmerson's work. I think Brian Auger and Mike Ratledge were both coming from a more mature musical expression at this time. As for who came first Billie or Keith I have no idea.
 
I've been playing keyboards a while too, and agree with much of what you're saying - but I can hear an instinctive logic that makes me shy away from the "kitchen sink" criticism as a general thing - my feeling is that it's rushed because he can't play the ideas he's having very well due to lack of academic training.
 
If you listen to the full-length Yes version, there seem to be passages that Yes have taken from this version - the 1-2-3 ending, for example, appears to be used at the beginning in Yes' version. Concurrence?
 
The incoporation of "Jesu, bleibet meine Freude" (Bach) in the 1-2-3 version isn't as contrived as it first seems, on subsequent listens - for example. The logical musical flow here seems pretty good, even if the execution is off.
 
I can't think of many "rock" acts playing in late 1966/early 1967 that took the improvised feel and arrangement to this kind of level - context is important here, as mid 1967 saw an explosion in this sort of invention, including the formation of The Nice...
 
Much of what was happening at the time in Rock was pure rather than structured improv, and structured improv is what forms the basis of many of the bands of the "progressive music" movement (including Pink Floyd - Saucerful of Secrets has a 4-part structure - designed as a kind of architectural blueprint, I seem to remember reading somewhere) - and crucially, early Prog Rock bands.
 
The structured improv here is primitive - but I think it serves well as Prog Rock roots - if, indeed, it turns out to be 100% genuine.
 
 
 
*New strand of research - structured improv in rock - preferably pre-dating 1966.*


Edited by Certif1ed - October 01 2007 at 08:34
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 09:48

I'm a keyboard player myself; I have a Hammond organ (albeit a home model, unfortunately not a B3!!). I find that I can play some of Wakeman's material but Emerson's is often way beyond my capabilities!!LOL I know some find Emerson too flash, but I find his playing to be brilliant and well judged; there are modern keyboard players to be far flashier (Jordan Rudess springs to mind) to the point I don't even register or be impressed by what they are playing as it's too fast.

I can hear the sound of early Yes and The Nice here very clearly, but the date of this recording is key. There is an earlier version of 'America' by Yes that was recorded for the BBC; I don't own it as it didn't appear on that 2-cd 'Something's Coming' set of BBC recordings, but apparently the first time they played it for the BBC was on the 20th October 1970 for The Mike Harding Show, and I'd assume it was in their live set before that, so perhaps this is something to bear in mind as well, IMHO.

 
For me, Billy's organ tone is not anywhere near as adventurous (IMHO of course) as what Keith Emerson and Mike Ratledge's were. His playing itself is quite interesting, though, IMHO. I think it's the rather mundane sound of the organ that might make some question how innovative/good he was. As for the arrangement itself, I think it's a bit piecemeal, but there you go...Is it me or does the applause at the end of this not quite fit in with the sound quality present on the music?
 
I've just discovered that there is an anthology of Keith Emerson called 'Hammer It Out' that actually features a recording he did in the mid-60s of 'Rock Candy'; perhaps that might clear up who was influenced by who....


Edited by salmacis - October 01 2007 at 09:56
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 09:55
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

8 Miles High is completely relevant not just here, but in modern rock generally - as is their electrified renditions of Dylan's songs that led to Dylan causing an outrage at the Newport Folk festival in 1965. The Byrds also introduced the Beatles to Ravi Shankar - these 3 (Dylan, Byrds and Beatles) and their important meeting(s) are probably THE most significant things to happen to rock music, ever - but that's all part of what came before Proto Prog, and this huge set of strands is well documented.
 
[


Joe Boyd in his autobiography White Bicycles, wrote about rock coming about at that Newport jazz & folk festival, when Dylan walked on stage with members of Paul Butterfield's BB and Al Kooper (?). Personally I don't remember using the word 'rock' until the late 60's - indeed whilst the word was freely bandied about by the music media (especially the underground press), my hesitancy to its use was because no clear definition of the term were provided - hence my confusion/bemusement what the difference was with rock'n'roll? Perhaps a forgotten reason why the terms 'progressive music' on this side of the Atlantic and 'underground music' both sides were preferred. So if 'rock' wasn't used until mid 60's, things having the name 'rock' crystallised very quickly or did they? I still hold that 'progressive rock 'only became commonplace after 1971/2
 
On the remaster of The Groundhogs' 'Thank Christ For The Bomb', there are some extra tracks taken from BBC sessions. One of those is a 21st July 1970 session recording of 'Garden' on the Mike Harding show and it's clearly stated 'they've now switched to progressive rock', even way back then. Presumably the term may well have been used before then? There was a thread running on the origins of the term a while back but it petered out long ago...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 09:55
I think the Beatlesque applause is tacked on.

I probably overstated in my criticisms of Billie, he has his moments. I see what you mean about organized improv as opposed to pure improv, organized improv is a lot of the prog-rock trip.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 11:25
Originally posted by salmacis salmacis wrote:

Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

8 Miles High is completely relevant not just here, but in modern rock generally - as is their electrified renditions of Dylan's songs that led to Dylan causing an outrage at the Newport Folk festival in 1965. The Byrds also introduced the Beatles to Ravi Shankar - these 3 (Dylan, Byrds and Beatles) and their important meeting(s) are probably THE most significant things to happen to rock music, ever - but that's all part of what came before Proto Prog, and this huge set of strands is well documented.
 
[


Joe Boyd in his autobiography White Bicycles, wrote about rock coming about at that Newport jazz & folk festival, when Dylan walked on stage with members of Paul Butterfield's BB and Al Kooper (?). Personally I don't remember using the word 'rock' until the late 60's - indeed whilst the word was freely bandied about by the music media (especially the underground press), my hesitancy to its use was because no clear definition of the term were provided - hence my confusion/bemusement what the difference was with rock'n'roll? Perhaps a forgotten reason why the terms 'progressive music' on this side of the Atlantic and 'underground music' both sides were preferred. So if 'rock' wasn't used until mid 60's, things having the name 'rock' crystallised very quickly or did they? I still hold that 'progressive rock 'only became commonplace after 1971/2
 
On the remaster of The Groundhogs' 'Thank Christ For The Bomb', there are some extra tracks taken from BBC sessions. One of those is a 21st July 1970 session recording of 'Garden' on the Mike Harding show and it's clearly stated 'they've now switched to progressive rock', even way back then. Presumably the term may well have been used before then? There was a thread running on the origins of the term a while back but it petered out long ago...
 
It comes down to regular and preferred use. Underground music certainly was preferred in the late 60's  - but then The Wowie Zowie compilation subtitled as The World Of Progressive Music, shows that there was an alternative term. As written before, progressive rock was in general use after the dust had settled and the established bands were headlining: KC, Yes, Genesis etc. , i.e. there was something less ambiguous about the genre. I believe 1970 was the year of a massive explosion in experimental and exploratory variants of rock, let me repeat check: Stud (1st), Skid Row (2nd), Patto (1st) albums (as numbered) for examples of everything and the kitchen sink being tried out.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 12:55
The term "progressive music" was bandied about a fair amount in the late 1960s - I've been told that "progressive rock" was actually used in conjunction with Eclection - I've never seen the (1968) album, but apparently the term is printed on the album sleeve.
 
Sadly, I could only find this small picture of the sleeve, so can't verify (the music is a bit like Fairport Convention);
 

Eclection%20-%20the%20album%20-%20front

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 12:55
Originally posted by salmacis salmacis wrote:

On the remaster of The Groundhogs' 'Thank Christ For The Bomb', there are some extra tracks taken from BBC sessions. One of those is a 21st July 1970 session recording of 'Garden' on the Mike Harding show and it's clearly stated 'they've now switched to progressive rock', even way back then.
 
Strikes me as odd for a band I followed at the time and most of us would have still said The Groundhogs were still blues (rock) then ............
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 13:15
This may be redundant info for you but, I remember as early as 1970 maybe earlier, that FM stations that played long cuts or album sides referred to themselves as progressive or progressive rock. This could mean anything from Humble Pie to John Mayall to King Crimson. Later when these stations started to disappear or go commercial (a lot of them around '72) the word progressive slowly morphed to mean only bands like King Crimson.
In other words the termed started out to include a wide variety of bands who didn't make commercial hits, but later it referred only to bands of a certain style (Crimson, Yes etc)
I am referring to U.S. radio and U.S. slang, could be different elsewhere.

Edited by Easy Money - October 01 2007 at 14:15
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 14:39
I have the Eclection album on CD but unfortunately, the sleevenotes were newly written for the CD. Musically, it's closer to The Mamas and The Papas or 'Surrealistic Pillow'-era Jefferson Airplane than anything folk-rock, let alone progressive rock! It had Trevor Lucas and Gerry Conway in the band, both of which did go onto Fairport Convention, but the music is not like Fairport at all, IMHO.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 17:24
I am not totally convinced that the America recording is even "live". If this was a 1-2-3 recording they were playing smaller venues, according to wiki they didn't move up to larger venues until the name change to Clouds. Here, I am assuming it was recorded in the Marquee, but it could be anywhere, but most probably nowhere larger than the Marquee:
  1. Intro audience screems fade out at around 0:30 - that level of *beatlemania* hysteria would not have faded and would still have been picked up on the vocal and drum mics. If they were attracting this kind of teenage-reaction then they would have been on the front-pages of the Daily Mirror.
  2. No audience noise during quiet passages - see (1) - The Marquee was quite a small venue, the audience was very near the stage and some ambient chatter would have been picked up. It's near impossible not to.
  3. The sound is too balanced for the technology of 1967, even with the drop-outs - this sounds more like playing live in a studio than in a venue.
  4. The audience at the end is too big for The Wardor St. Marquee - it just could hold that many people!!!

I've yet to hear a recording from the Marquee, or anyother small venue of this era, that is anywhere near as good as this (can't count Dream Theater - that was recorded after the Marquee moved to Charring Cross Road). The give-away for me is the drums - I've never heard drums recorded in a small venue being that far down in the mix - usually every cymbal hit gets picked up on every mic in the house - here you can barely hear them at all.

I cannot say that this recording is not genuine, but I have doubts, which in turn throws serious doubt on the rest of the claims made for 1-2-3 (for me).


Edited by darqdean - October 01 2007 at 17:35
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 17:35
Originally posted by salmacis salmacis wrote:

I have the Eclection album on CD but unfortunately, the sleevenotes were newly written for the CD. Musically, it's closer to The Mamas and The Papas or 'Surrealistic Pillow'-era Jefferson Airplane than anything folk-rock, let alone progressive rock! It had Trevor Lucas and Gerry Conway in the band, both of which did go onto Fairport Convention, but the music is not like Fairport at all, IMHO.
 
I've only heard one track - and probably made the connection through the band members... Embarrassed
 
Thanks for that - but I didn't think it sounded much like either Mamas and Papas or Jefferson Airplane...! Tongue
 
Here are the liner notes, that include the term "progressive rock" http://www.richieunterberger.com/eclection.html - the term meant something different in the 1960s - see my response to Ghost Rider's thread http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=42194&PN=2
 
 
I agree with Dick on the Groundhogs - "Thank Christ..." is nothing like Prog - it's just great heavy blues.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 17:49
Originally posted by darqdean darqdean wrote:

I am not totally convinced that the America recording is even "live". If this was a 1-2-3 recording they were playing smaller venues, according to wiki they didn't move up to larger venues until the name change to Clouds. Here, I am assuming it was recorded in the Marquee, but it could be anywhere, but most probably nowhere larger than the Marquee:
  1. Intro audience screems fade out at around 0:30 - that level of *beatlemania* hysteria would not have faded and would still have been picked up on the vocal and drum mics. If they were attracting this kind of teenage-reaction then they would have been on the front-pages of the Daily Mirror.
  2. No audience noise during quiet passages - see (1) - The Marquee was quite a small venue, the audience was very near the stage and some ambient chatter would have been picked up. It's near impossible not to.
  3. The sound is too balanced for the technology of 1967, even with the drop-outs - this sounds more like playing live in a studio than in a venue.
  4. The audience at the end is too big for The Wardor St. Marquee - it just could hold that many people!!!

I've yet to hear a recording from the Marquee, or anyother small venue of this era, that is anywhere near as good as this (can't count Dream Theater - that was recorded after the Marquee moved to Charring Cross Road). The give-away for me is the drums - I've never heard drums recorded in a small venue being that far down in the mix - usually every cymbal hit gets picked up on every mic in the house - here you can barely hear them at all.

I cannot say that this recording is not genuine, but I have doubts, which in turn throws serious doubt on the rest of the claims made for 1-2-3.
 
 
The only thing I can offer to contradict any of this is that I posted a flyer earlier in this thread that clearly shows 1-2-3 on the bill as part of an all-dayer at the Marquee in March 1967. They definitely played there, and fairly regularly - but not as headliners, as the Clouds website would have you think.
 
The Marquee had a 4-track studio (which opened in 1967, oddly enough), so it's possible that the band recorded it in the studio and overdubbed the applause. .
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 01 2007 at 19:14
I would be comfortable with the notion that the track was recorded in the Marquee studio and the applause was dubbed on. The reverb on the track does seem to support that - all recordings I've heard from the Marquee club sound like they were recorded in a dustbin Wink
 
I also don't doubt that they had gigs at the Marquee in 1967 even if they do not show in the Marquee gig list. However if they had a residency (which they do claim) then it would be mentioned on the Marquee website. (see the Marquee timeline)
 
However, it appears that Clouds had a residency in 1969... and on three occasions as a support band to another Marquee resident band - Yes.
 
1969

Resident artists:
Monday: Eclection, Renaissance, Clouds, Writting On the Wall, the Liverpool Scene
Wednesday: Yes, the Spirit of John Morgan, Circus, Keith Tippett, Mixed Media
Thursday: Terry Reid, the Spirit of John Morgan, Yes, Clouds, the Glass Menagerie
Friday: Taste, Blodwyn Pig, Hardin & York
Saturday: Spice, Procession, Octopus, Village, Writting On the Wall, Affinity
Sunday: The Explosives, the House of Lords, Trifle, King Crimson, Circus, Magna Carta

 
Yes headline with Clouds in support: Wednesday 29/01/69, Wednesday 26/02/69, Wednesday 19/03/69
 
...It doth seem odd that two bands on the same bill had links to the same cover song. Odder still when the support band is claiming first use with a suspect "live" recording from two years earlier without validated provenance.
 
I would also question the impartiality of Mr Bowie's testimony - a 19yo (struggling) singer/songwriter is very likely to hype-up a band who is playing one of his songs.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2007 at 02:54
^I agree about Bowie, and the testimony itself is somewhat vague. Bowie tries to express himself in academic musical terms, but gets many of these muddled up. Bowie's always been one to champion the underdogs, though - I remember reading a testimonial he wrote about the all-girl American rock band, Fanny that was over the top, considering the MOR rock that the girls played. I seem to remember he said something like "These girls rock like motherf******s".
 
As to the Marquee dates, Clouds appeared quite regularly in 1968 too, in support slots - as did Yes; http://www.themarqueeclub.net/1968 (look at the bands who played in 1968 and drool!).
 
Yes also played frequently as their ealier incarnation, Syn; http://www.themarqueeclub.net/1967  - note Clouds' first gig in December - 1-2-3 don't even have a mention, yet the clipiping below clearly shows they played on 25th March. Come to think of it, all of March's Saturday gigs are missing, which is odd, given that Syn occupy every Saturday in April, May and June.
 
Maybe this is the root source of the grievance over "America" (just guessing).
 
The band that Clouds supported in December 1967 are interesting, as they became Patto, and are credited on some sites as being one of the earliest bands to merge jazz and rock. http://www.zvents.com/performers/show/23751-timebox
 
 
Their Marquee residency is remarked on at the Dunfermline Ballroom site - - which in turn references the book "The Tapestry of Delights Revisited" by Vernon Joyson - a book I have oft seen discussed as historically and factually inaccurate, and packed with his own opinions (like so many books on this time period in rock music), but nevertheless an important tome on the subject .
 
On the subject of "America", the song - I covered in earlier posts how it might be possible, and the explanation I have from my contact - which is not implausible.
 
 
Oh, and here's the flyer/newspaper clipping (from marmalade-skies, NOT Clouds' website!) - I misread it earler, 1-2-3 actually headlined on Saturday 25th;
 


Edited by Certif1ed - October 02 2007 at 03:06
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2007 at 05:09
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

This may be redundant info for you but, I remember as early as 1970 maybe earlier, that FM stations that played long cuts or album sides referred to themselves as progressive or progressive rock. This could mean anything from Humble Pie to John Mayall to King Crimson. Later when these stations started to disappear or go commercial (a lot of them around '72) the word progressive slowly morphed to mean only bands like King Crimson.
In other words the termed started out to include a wide variety of bands who didn't make commercial hits, but later it referred only to bands of a certain style (Crimson, Yes etc)
I am referring to U.S. radio and U.S. slang, could be different elsewhere.
 
I think we are sort of agreeing - progressive music was the original full name, and because I believe the US media was well ahead of the UK media, the use of progressive rock or progressive  would there too.  My evidence is the first entry in PA's variuous artists section Wowie Zowie: The World Of Progressive Music (1969)- which supports your observation about the breadth of music the term encompassed. And indeed there was this whittling down of bands that qualified as progressive rock - but I'll stick with my 1971/2 date; perhaps it is only with the appearance of PA there has been a re-expansion well beyond what was envisaged in the late 60's wrt acceptable music, (Gibraltar seems to have been much more conservative for a longer time, for instance).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2007 at 05:19
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

^
 
As to the Marquee dates, Clouds appeared quite regularly in 1968 too, in support slots - as did Yes; http://www.themarqueeclub.net/1968 (look at the bands who played in 1968 and drool!).
 
 
 
 
Indeed I've written about Timebox - I saw them at Tolworth's Toby Jug, a few months before they folded. Live they were a fusion of pop/rock with jazz - and they would have been known as a rock -jazz group then, since the base songs they used were pop, but had plenty of scope to expand in the middle sections into jazzy solos - especially in the hands of the mulit-talented Ollie Halsall. As I've said many thime here, I was priveliged(?) to see Ollie do a Keith Moon dismantling of his vibes at the end of the last tune of their set. The problem was Decca Records really constrained what Timebox put out on record - a compilation (I think of all their recordings) was released a few years back, and you really struggle to find compelling evidence they were much more than a talented pop group. With the thought that 1970 was a year of an explosion of ideas on record, and gave the first Patto album as an example, it is perhaps not surprising that Timebox were very adventurous given the chance - i.e. at most gigs. BTW a little known fact: Ollie Halsall did audition (on Holdsworth's recommendation) for lead guitar with the Soft Machine but John Etheridge got the seat .


Edited by Dick Heath - October 02 2007 at 06:53
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2007 at 05:21
Originally posted by salmacis salmacis wrote:

I have the Eclection album on CD but unfortunately, the sleevenotes were newly written for the CD. Musically, it's closer to The Mamas and The Papas or 'Surrealistic Pillow'-era Jefferson Airplane than anything folk-rock, let alone progressive rock! It had Trevor Lucas and Gerry Conway in the band, both of which did go onto Fairport Convention, but the music is not like Fairport at all, IMHO.
 
Sal, in the early days of Fairports, I often read they were England's Jefferson Airplane (and I presume that  meant the pre-Grace Slick era Plane). Hence your comment makes some sense.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2007 at 08:20
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

(...) The problem was Decca Records really constrained what Timebox put out on record - a compilation (I think of all their recordings) was released a few years back, and you really struggle to find compelling evidence they were much more than a talented pop group. (...)
 
This story is so familiar - that's exactly what I'm getting from the Clouds camp, that the band were so much more live than they were in their recordings, thanks to record company policy - and what I've heard so far is quite a long way from the band in the recording of "America" that we've heard.
 
Presumably there are many others like this from that time - including my current nomination for Proto-Prog/Proto-Electronic/Proto Space Rock - a US band called Fifty Foot Hose:
 
Most of the pieces on the album "Cauldron" are approximations of what the band did live, including "Red the Sign Post", a piece that Ritchie Blackmore liked so much, he "borrowed" it to write "Space Trucking". Wink
 
It's interesting that the album was released on the experimental label, Limelight (part of Mercury records) - if the so-called experimental labels were reeling the bands in as part of a sign-up frenzy for this new music, and then compromising their musical vision to help sales, then that lends some credibility to 1-2-3/Clouds' story.
 
But then there are potentially hundreds of such "important" bands, from 1966-67, aren't there?
 
 
/edit - Grace defeinitely sang on "Surrealistic Pillow" - I'm not familiar with any of their material pre-Grace.


Edited by Certif1ed - October 02 2007 at 08:23
The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2007 at 10:22
I'll give the Eclection album another listen, for sure. The problem with my CD (on Collector's Choice) is that the transfer is diabolical; I'm not good with technical terms but it sounds really compressed to these ears.
 
I am not familiar with Fifty Foot Hose (have heard of them though), but Blackmore/Deep Purple 'borrowing' their material doesn't surprise me in the least. Look at 'Black Night' which borrows liberally the riff from Blues Magoos' 'We Ain't Got Nothing Yet' and 'Child In Time' which owes a lot to It's A Beautiful Day's 'Bombay Calling'.
 
And I gave The Artwoods' album 'Art Gallery' a listen, on the subject of Deep Purple. It's nothing all that startling; if this album didn't have Keef Hartley and Jon Lord on it, it would attract far less attention, IMHO. The whole album is made up entirely of cover versions, and whilst this isn't unusual in itself for the period, the interpretations tend to lack flair, IMHO. Jon Lord does have a showpiece though, in a cover version of Jimmy Smith's 'Walk On The Wild Side' which is by far the best track to my ears. Like Manfred Mann, though, they too did jazzy cover versions of pop hits on an EP called 'Jazz In Jeans'. Listening to all these various albums again, it's clear to me that the evolution in this period cannot be tied down to one band, IMHO.
 
I like the fact that this site is so all-encompassing. I read other prog websites and it seems as if a lot of them don't even listen to or acknowledge anything outside of symphonic prog!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 02 2007 at 18:50
Child in Time was pretty much outright theft. Lord liked playing Bombay Calling during warm-ups and then Ian just started singing with it one day and you know the rest. They ended up calling a live CD, that I think was recorded in India, "Bombay Calling" in a belated pay back.
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