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Norbert
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 20 2005
Location: Hungary
Status: Offline
Points: 2506
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Posted: January 25 2006 at 03:41 |
russellk wrote:
The problem, Norbert, is that you betray an appalling ignorance of how the music industry works. They don't come up with 'sure things' and find some faceless, talentless nobody to front them. It's quite the opposite: thousands of nobodies fight each other for the chance to pitch their own talents to record companies, who take a punt on them just in case they're the next 'breakthrough' act.
I'm sorry to disillusion you, but it takes special talent to perform like Spears or Madonna. There are the glorious exceptions, such as Milli Vanilli, but these always get found out. To believe that pop stars are talentless is a slur on yourself -- if they are talentless, why aren't you out there making millions? Because you have less talent than they do, that's why.
Lighten up on Phil Collins is what I'm asking. Forget your own sense of betrayal, of what might have been. He didn't owe you four more albums like Trick of the Tail. If, like me, you didn't enjoy his more recent work as much as his earlier work, that's fine. Say so, I won't argue. Me, I admire the man. |
OK , I see your point . Talent is certainly relative somehow.Madonna never would be able to write and perform a glorious masterpiece like Close to the Edge or Supper's ready. And she should not try that.
In some aspects I am maybe more talented than Madonna.Not at stage performance.
The thing that makes me upset that most people don't even try to discover,
to some more demanding music. There are not many people who know anyting about Peter Hamill. They easily consume everything what they are actually offered.
They listen to what is trendy.
Edited by Norbert
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ryba
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 20 2006
Location: Slovakia
Status: Offline
Points: 117
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Posted: January 25 2006 at 05:29 |
i like peter hammill for years but i like phill collins very much too.
all that sayings that he spoilt genesis are simply nonsense and people
saying that are snobish. he is a great great great musician. that is
all.
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Norbert
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 20 2005
Location: Hungary
Status: Offline
Points: 2506
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Posted: January 25 2006 at 07:28 |
Hi guys !
To summarize and clear up:
1. Phil Collins is certainly a good musician, some Genesis and Brand X albums easily prove that.
His solo works are not my cup of tea, but I find them listenable.They are far more enjoyable than
outputs of average pop stars.
On the other hand, I only can call the post 1980 Genesis letdown and disappointment.
2. The number of the sold records does not tell anything about quality.
Dark Side of the Moon is a classic album and it is one of the best selling albums ever. Bohemian Rhapsody is a superb song altough it was No 1. for 9 weeks.
The Beatles always wrote enjoyable songs which are still very popular. Led Zeppelin filled the biggest
arenas and most of their albums are good. Radiohead is a rather succesful band and their music is
mostly very good.
So there are a lot of great music which is very popular.
But horrible music is horrible music no matter how succesful it is. The millions of sold albums by Britney Spears don't make her "music" better.
Do you think that popularity is an escuse for everything?
This thread is a bit overreacted, isn't it?
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Jools
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 30 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 159
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Posted: January 25 2006 at 09:16 |
1. If Genesis hadn't have gone the way they did they would've folded about 20 years earlier than they did so whether you like what they produced after W&W or not what have you lost? Some people liked some or all of the later years and get pleasue out of the 80's and 90's proggier tracks some didn't, those that didn't can choose to ignore them or waste energy by getting all upset by them and trying to blame somebody.
2. Genesis were probably one of the biggest bands on the planet around 86/87. They could easily have hit singles, they had credibilty amongst some rock and prog fans, there success had nothing to do with sex appeal and they were all about 36. Quite some achievement then let alone now when compared to todays youth driven/clean cut/style over content/ manufactured pop environement.
Phil Collins wasn't the mastermind at any time but he was a worthy contributer and the only man for that job.
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Ridicule is the burden of genius.
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ken4musiq
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 14 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 446
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Posted: January 25 2006 at 14:19 |
The first real prog rock album that I know of is In The Court Of The Crimson King.Maybe they didn't invent it exactly but that was an album that defined the genre very well.None of the other bands were close to Crimson at the time IMO. >>>
It brings up the question what exactly is prog. Perhaps the ingredient that Crimson added to the pallette was the improvisation. But when you think of a song like I Talk to the Wind as a response to Dylans'a Blowin' in the Wind, you really see how silly the album is. What saves the album is the mellotron, which for me really defines the early prog sound. my feeling is that prog is something much larger than we have come to define it by.
I think that prog is a very masculine genre. And King Crimson is the most masculine in the group. But the big bands like ELP and Jethro Tull and then ultimately Genesis made it big because they could relate to women. By bringing the piano to the forefront, ELP was especially important in making rock a cross gender genre. But I think today it is a largely male driven. I've never seen Dream Theater but how many women come without their husbands or boyfriends dragging them along? there are few at Crimson concerts.
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erlenst
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 17 2005
Location: Denmark
Status: Offline
Points: 387
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Posted: January 25 2006 at 17:47 |
The Miracle wrote:
erlenst wrote:
The Miracle wrote:
He was the one
who made Genesis sell out. Once Hackett left, he really became the
mastermind, and killed a great band. And his solo career was cheap pop
too! |
EXPLAIN !!! NOW !! I am sick of people puking
out stuff like this, when it actually makes no sense ! What was Banks
and Rutherford then ? Mindless sheep ?? How will you explain their role
in the process of selling out ?
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"We thought, 'f*ck it, let's sell out" -Phil
They had, of course, some involvement, but Phil had the poppiest career, sand he was the songwriter, Banks and Rutherford were almost session musicians for him on the later albums They didn't do too well on their own either, but it was Collins who started it all. |
Even though I seriously doubt that he was the mastermind behind the
whole sellout scheme, consider this: Wouldn't Banks and Rutherford be
JUST as guilty as him, when they in fact didn't give a sh*t about him
"ruining the band" ? Even though it might have been his idea (though I
doubt), Banks and Rutherford obviously thought it was a great idea.
Hence, they're just as guilty in making Genesis a pop band.
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Losendos
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 03 2005
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 571
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Posted: January 25 2006 at 20:55 |
Blaming Phil Collins for the demise of prog/genesis is the stupidest idea that is widespread amongst prog fans.
Point 1 The public's taste had changed. The complex sound of the early 70s was out and the simpler sound of eLVIS cOSTELLO OR THE Police was in
Point2 Before ATTW3 ELP had already made Love Beach and Yes Tormato in which the prog element was very much diluted. Pink Floyd would also make the Wall whose prog element is questionable. At the same time Phil was busting his gut for prog in Brand X.
Point 3 Phil was an integral part of the compositional team for TLLDOB ATOTT and WAW
Point 4 By ATTW3 Genesis had lost 40 per cent of it's line up making the complex layered sound of earlier masterpieces nearly impossible to recreate
Point FIVE Phil is a hard working lovely guy who loved Yes and is proud of his years in prog
Point SIX he also wrote For Absent Friends and Please don't ask Me two classics
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How wonderful to be so profound
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lunaticviolist
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 17 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 478
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Posted: January 25 2006 at 22:54 |
plstipus143 wrote:
Personally I feel Mike and Tony are as much to blame as Phil |
I agree. I don't hate Phil, I just don't really like his
music. He obviously wanted to try something else. Peter
Gabriel didn't play much prog after he left Genesis. Yes "sold
out" in the '80s. Asia, GTR...the list goes on. Let's face
it. If Phil sold out, so did the entire prog world.
Edited by lunaticviolist
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My recent purchases:
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BiGi
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 01 2005
Location: Italy
Status: Offline
Points: 848
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 03:05 |
Norbert wrote:
BiGi wrote:
Norbert wrote:
I don't believe that Collins and Spears are the same, I just wanted to point out that becoming a famous pop star does not require any kind of special talent. | No? And what does it require? I'm eager to know... |
Of course I mean musical talent.
Ask any member of the Backstreet Boys or Britney Spears in person, they know surely more than an ignorant prog-snob like me who is stuck on uninteresting albums like Foxtrot or Pawn Hearts or Relayer and many more. |
russelk in his post explained exactly what I think!
No fraud can sell million of copies worldwide!
And were it only for their pretty faces, Madonna and Britney would not count so many female fans (or the Backstreet Boys and Robbie Williams so many male ones)!
And as far as it concerns Phil Collins I have absolutely nothing against him or the musical direction he decided along with his bandmates to pursue!
Crikey, even Gentle Giant went pop on Giant for a day and Civilian which are maybe lesser efforts, but not bad at all...yet nobody is so harsh towards brothers Shulman or Kerry Minnear!
Why? Because they were less successful? So the great guilt on Phil Collins is that he has managed to be successful?
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A flower?
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Norbert
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 20 2005
Location: Hungary
Status: Offline
Points: 2506
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 03:57 |
BiGi wrote:
Norbert wrote:
BiGi wrote:
Norbert wrote:
I don't believe that Collins and Spears are the same, I just wanted to point out that becoming a famous pop star does not require any kind of special talent. | No? And what does it require? I'm eager to know... | Of course I mean musical talent. Ask any member of the Backstreet Boys or Britney Spears in person, they know surely more than an ignorant prog-snob like me who is stuck on uninteresting albums like Foxtrot or Pawn Hearts or Relayer and many more. | russelk in his post explained exactly what I think! No fraud can sell million of copies worldwide! And were it only for their pretty faces, Madonna and Britney would not count so many female fans (or the Backstreet Boys and Robbie Williams so many male ones)!
And as far as it concerns Phil Collins I have absolutely nothing against him or the musical direction he decided along with his bandmates to pursue! Crikey, even Gentle Giant went pop on Giant for a day and Civilian which are maybe lesser efforts, but not bad at all...yet nobody is so harsh towards brothers Shulman or Kerry Minnear! Why? Because they were less successful? So the great guilt on Phil Collins is that he has managed to be successful? |
I am not less entitled to my opinion than you are.
Your opinion is that the music of Madonna, Backstreet Boys etc. works.Listen to them if you think
that they are OK. I won't argue that.
My opinion is that their songs are dull, meaningless,pointless. This is nothing to do with how they look like.
There are some good pop groups like The Beach Boys, Dire Straits, and even ABBA.
I don't hate Phil Collins at all, I am just not very keen on his solo works and on Genesis after 1980.
As you can read in my most recent post. Collins is miles above the mentioned boys and girls(I mean not The Beach Boys but the younger ones).
Millions of people can't be wrong and be misguided? This is a very, very naive statement.
Unfortunately, they can.
I never wish to become a millionaire by selling throw-away material. I dont envy any of these MTV icons. If you do, that is your business.
Edited by Norbert
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Losendos
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 03 2005
Location: Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 571
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 04:15 |
lunaticviolist wrote:
plstipus143 wrote:
Personally I feel Mike and Tony are as much to blame as Phil
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I agree. I don't hate Phil, I just don't really like his music. He obviously wanted to try something else. Peter Gabriel didn't play much prog after he left Genesis. Yes "sold out" in the '80s. Asia, GTR...the list goes on. Let's face it. If Phil sold out, so did the entire prog world.
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also Phil was one of the last to do it.I don't know how in the 80s and 90s he could settle for such mediocrity having once been part of a brilliant music creating ensemble.But that is another question.
Phil had nothing to do with the demise of prog and for one who was around in the 70s at the time it was never attributed to him . Maybe to TFTO , maybe to the Works tour , but mostly to changing taste of the public
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How wonderful to be so profound
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luc4fun
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 17 2005
Location: Italy
Status: Offline
Points: 130
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 04:44 |
I know many of you will not agree, but I love Genesis music after PG departure.
Albums such as Wind and Wuthering or And then there were 3, are absolutely masterpieces and PC support and contribution was excellent (I love his voice!).
I believe anyway he started his (and Genesis decline) after the good sales of his first solo album, which also diverted Genesis music to a more commercial style.
..And we all know how it ended...
Luca
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Site Admin at www.progrockwall.com
the first social network for Proggers!
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erlenst
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 17 2005
Location: Denmark
Status: Offline
Points: 387
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 06:50 |
Losendos wrote:
lunaticviolist wrote:
plstipus143 wrote:
Personally I feel Mike and Tony are as much to blame as Phil
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I agree. I don't hate Phil, I just don't really
like his music. He obviously wanted to try something else.
Peter Gabriel didn't play much prog after he left Genesis. Yes
"sold out" in the '80s. Asia, GTR...the list goes on. Let's
face it. If Phil sold out, so did the entire prog world.
|
also Phil was one of the last to do it.I don't know how in
the 80s and 90s he could settle for such mediocrity having once been
part of a brilliant music creating ensemble.But that is another
question.
Phil had nothing to do with the demise of prog and
for one who was around in the 70s at the time it was never attributed
to him . Maybe to TFTO , maybe to the Works tour , but mostly to
changing taste of the public |
Wwhaha, are you suggesting that TFTO has anything to do with the demise of prog ? Get real !
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BebieM
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 01 2004
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 854
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 07:15 |
ken4musiq wrote:
The first real prog rock album that I
know of is In The Court Of The Crimson King.Maybe they didn't
invent it exactly but that was an album that defined the genre very
well.None of the other bands were close to Crimson at the time
IMO. >>>
It brings up the question what exactly is prog. Perhaps the
ingredient that Crimson added to the pallette was the improvisation.
But when you think of a song like I Talk to the Wind as a response to
Dylans'a Blowin' in the Wind, you really see how silly the album is.
What saves the album is the mellotron, which for me really defines the
early prog sound. my feeling is that prog is something much larger than
we have come to define it by.
I think that prog is a very masculine genre. And King Crimson
is the most masculine in the group. But the big bands like ELP
and Jethro Tull and then ultimately Genesis made it big because they
could relate to women. By bringing the piano to the forefront,
ELP was especially important in making rock a cross gender genre. But I
think today it is a largely male driven. I've never seen Dream
Theater but how many women come without their husbands or boyfriends
dragging them along? there are few at Crimson concerts. |
I pretty much disagree with all you said. ITCOTCK is not at all silly, and really is the first prog album.
What are you trying to say with that paragraph about gender? (Btw, KC
isn't the most masculine in the group for sure, particularly NOT their
first albums which are the ones we're talking about)
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sigod
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 17 2004
Location: London
Status: Offline
Points: 2779
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 07:36 |
Under wrote:
Collins was surely not the big man behind early Genesis and as far I know he never claimed to be. The man is a lazy genius. |
It's Collins significant critisism of the 70's material that sours the milk
for me although I will say his contribution to music as a drummmer is
(IMO) beyond question.
BTW Under, I loved the phrase 'lazy genius'
Edited by sigod
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I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
- Clement Atlee, on Winston Churchill
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19557
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 13:57 |
NetsNJFan wrote:
Ivan, I really do think sometimes that you let your dissapointment of Gabriel and Hackett leaving cloud your judgement of later Genesis. So what, its no perfect prog, its still very good music.
It's not prog at all, it may be good music for people who like soft POP, but not for me.
I really do reccomend you listen to the Three Sides Live album (which I think is their best live) and tell me those songs aren't prog (most of them).
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Nope, it doesn't cloud me at all, I bought Three sides Live (Really the 4 sides live one) and it sucks.
The medley is horrible, Phil Collins singing for example In the Cage lacks of depth, emotion, panic., Daryl Stuermer is an excellent Jazz guitar player, but he can't create the atnmoispheres Steve Hackett did.
At the end I bought one 4 sides album for one side that doesn't fill me.
Ivān
EDIT: I'm out of Lima, so I will be posting less often, But none of us compared Phil with Britney, we only answered to the fact that creating a hit single does not require great skills in most of cases.
Edited by ivan_2068
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GPFR
Forum Senior Member
Joined: August 05 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 760
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 14:40 |
pakish wrote:
If you really know about prog music you should know that collins always was the mastermind of genesis. The leaving of Gabriel was a coincidence with the change in gensis music but also with all the musical movement in england, they truly kept on creating new things. The problem is to watch it retrospectivly and not paying attention to the context |
... If you really know about prog music you should know that BANKS always was the mastermind of genesis.
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www.myspace.com/hail_peter
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ken4musiq
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 14 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 446
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 14:53 |
I pretty much disagree with all you said. ITCOTCK is not at all silly, and really is the first prog album.
What are you trying to say with that paragraph about gender? (Btw, KC isn't the most masculine in the group for sure, particularly NOT their first albums which are the ones we're talking about)>>
My point is that, yes, everybody agrees the ITCOTCK is the first prog album. There is something exclusive about KC that garners them this title and what that may be muscially is the improvisation. I think though a better part of it is Prog is a male dominated genre and KC has come to identify the maculine side of old school prog. Red has often been described as the first heavy metal album. So people are more comfortable with KC as the first real not proto prog group. Maybe this comes from Macan's book. Historically, however, this is just not the case. The term prog was used earlier in 1968 to refer to Procol Harum and The Nice both of which are more prog because they identify the key element of what prog was and that was integrating classical references into the music. The Nice had all of the components of prog, classical references, odd meters, folk references and improvisation. I am also a big ELP fan and the reason why ITCOTCK is silly for me is Lake's lyrics. They ruined many a good ELP song,too. He's a great bassist though
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BebieM
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 01 2004
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 854
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 15:22 |
ken4musiq wrote:
I pretty much disagree with all you said. ITCOTCK is not at all silly, and really is the first prog album.
What
are you trying to say with that paragraph about gender? (Btw, KC isn't
the most masculine in the group for sure, particularly NOT their first
albums which are the ones we're talking about)>>
My point is that, yes, everybody agrees the ITCOTCK is the first
prog album. There is something exclusive about KC that
garners them this title and what that may be muscially is the
improvisation. I think though a better part of it is Prog is a
male dominated genre and KC has come to identify the maculine side of
old school prog. Red has often been described as the first heavy metal
album. So people are more comfortable with KC as the first
real not proto prog group. Maybe this comes from Macan's book.
Historically, however, this is just not the case. The term prog was
used earlier in 1968 to refer to Procol Harum and The Nice both of
which are more prog because they identify the key element of what prog
was and that was integrating classical references into the
music. The Nice had all of the components of prog, classical
references, odd meters, folk references and improvisation. I am also a
big ELP fan and the reason why ITCOTCK is silly for me is Lake's
lyrics. They ruined many a good ELP song,too. He's a great
bassist though |
I don't think improvisation is the biggest innovation KC made with
their first album. Three of the five songs don't have any improv. in
them, yet they're clearly prog.
I have to admit that I don't know too much of the Nice's work, probably
you're right that it already had most of the characteristics of prog,
at least in particular songs. I guess KC's debut was just so "out
there" at its time that it really took rock music to a new level which
then made it the "first prog album".
Another band would be Soft Machine, their debut also has most
components of prog (and was released before ITCOTCK), yet it wasn't the
big breakthrough in rock music KC made a year later.
I'm not a big fan of Lake's lyrics myself, but I find the ones on ITCOTCK quite enjoyable.
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richardh
Prog Reviewer
Joined: February 18 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Online
Points: 29086
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Posted: January 26 2006 at 16:12 |
Sorry but Pete Sinfield wrote the lyrics on In The Court Of The Crimson King NOT Greg Lake.
Edited by richardh
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