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EdL

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Posts posted by EdL

  1. Nov 17th (we've got a time delay here - when it's today in America, it's tomorrow in Australia - or something like that) :D

    1967 - Pink Floyd release their 3rd UK single "Apples and Oranges". It bombs.

    1979 - Jethro Tull bass player John Glascock dies at the ripe old age of 26 after open heart surgery.

    2004 - I've got a book called This Day In Rock - I knew it would come in handy one day!

  2. That's the first and only Bob Dylan song I've ever heard.

    Roger,

    Where've you been. What about "Hurricane" which was the subject of a movie in the last few years? Or "Things have Changed" which won an Oscar a couple of years ago? Or "Mr Tambourine Man" which heralded a new genre of music called folk rock (mind you, that was back in the 60's)? Do you have the TV series "Absolutely Fabulous" where you are? Guess who wrote the theme song (This Wheel's On Fire)? etc etc etc

  3. Thanks for the heads-up Edl. I apparently got bum info from a guy I met in the service who claimed to have been in boot camp with the drummer from Marmalade. But, now that you mention it, I HAD heard they were a UK band, but it did not register. They just never had another hit in the U.S.

    On a similar note I once met a fisherman in the far north of Australia who went under the name of Michael Clarke and claimed he was the original drummer with The Byrds. When I mentioned this on a newsgroup I was bombarded with messages telling me that The Byrds' Michael Clarke died some years ago :( Or did he just dodge the draft and quietly slip away to Australia?

  4. I didn´t know that... "Her majesty" about Jane Asher? Oh, pls, if you have more info about it, post it! Thank you, EdL!

    Edna, I've searched through all my Beatles related books and I can't find the reference - I'll keep looking and let you know. I can assure you that I didn't make it up. I remember that at the time I read about Jane Asher being the one referred to I thought, "Doesn't that make sense", rather than it being a "cheeky" reference to The Queen as some authors think.

  5. By Bob Dylan:

    Song to Woody - Woody Guthrie

    Ballad of Hollis Brown

    Only A Pawn in Their Game - Medgar Evers

    The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll - including William Zanzinger

    Oxford Town - James Meredith

    Hurricane - Rubin Carter

    ........and on and on and on!

    The Beatles:

    Fool on the Hill - The Maharishi

    Sexy Sadie - The Maharishi again

    Her Majesty - Jane Asher apparently

  6. Sorry if I seem to be hogging this one but if you want musical families you really can't get better than the Bach family. Johann Sebastian Bach is the famous one we all know and love but the Bach family produced dozens of musicians between the 16th and 18th centuries who were all equally famous in their day. Carl Philip Emmanuel Bach and Johann Christian Bach are just two that spring to mind. OK, OK, I know it's not pop music but those guys provided the foundation for what music is today. :beatnik:

  7. Arthur Alexander is not the only person to write songs that were recorded by Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones and The Beatles. The Rolling Stones released a live version of "Like a Rolling Stone" sometime in the 90's. The Beatles sang "Like a Rolling Stone" on the "Let It Be" album (well a couple of lines :() Bob Dylan wrote and recorded "Like a Rolling Stone". So, Bob Dylan can share that honour with Arthur Alexander. :jester:

  8. Thanks a lot NuttyTart - they haven't televised that episode of Cold Feet where I live so now I know that Rachel is going to die :( Only joking! Can you give us any more information about the song? By the way, have you seen the movie Sixth Sense yet....... :)

  9. My nominee would have to be "Reflections of my Life" by the group Marmalade back in 1968. The band broke up because 3 of the 5 guys were drafted. They wrote this song and hit nationally with it, signed a record deal, produced one album (of mostly their material), by the same name as their hit song. Then Vietnam called and they never existed again. Just a great song lyrically and musically. Best line: "The world is a bad place, a bad place, a very bad place to live; but I don't want to die."
    :: You must be thinking of another band; Marmalade were never one hit wonders. They hit the UK #1 spot in 1968 with a cover of The Beatles "Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da" and continued through to the early seventies with more hits like "Rainbow" and the one you quoted, "Reflections of My Life". They would never have been drafted for Vietnam as they were a UK band. They faded into obscurity after the UK newspaper, The News of the World, exposed their scandalous activities with under age groupies. :thumbsup:
  10. I was just listening to the Beatles first album from way back in 1963 and I noticed that two tracks, "Anna" and "Misery", might fit your situation. The best break up song of all time in my most 'umble opinion (as Uriah Heep might have said) is, "It Makes No Difference" by The Band. Anyway, I hope you're feeling OK.

  11. On a related subject - Beethoven's crypt was opened some years ago, possibly to check whether or not he had been rolling over. To everybody's surprise the grand old composer was sitting there with his manuscripts and an eraser, rubbing the notes off the paper. He was asked what he was doing (a number of times as he was still deaf) and eventually replied, in German of course, "I am decomposing". Sorry. :-)

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