http://inbedwithmaradona.com/journal/2017/5/20/5000-miles-to-survival
A tale of a Newport County fan on the last day...
A tale of a Newport County fan on the last day...
"It was 70 years ago today, Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play..."
The Beatles' most famous album, 50 years old today.
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"It was 70 years ago today, Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play..."
The Beatles' most famous album, 50 years old today.
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You like your music history, Quill. Who do you think was the guitarist on this 1964 track? No googling.
If you listen to the Stones version it is amazing how Jagger seems to impersonate his singing and phrasing.
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Hendrix. It certainly sounds like him, even that early.
The opening chords made me think of Jimi straight away.
"It was 70 years ago today, Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play..."
The Beatles' most famous album, 50 years old today.
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Always preferred Rubber Soul myself.
Agreed, always been an Abbey Road or Revolver man myself, Rubber Soul too, but there's no denying, at least in the general public's mind, Sgt. Pepper is their 'biggest' album.
For this anniversary, George Martin remixed the album - I've listened to it and honestly it sounds better than the original 1967 mono version. It's been completely cleaned up and sounds you could never hear before appear.
100% agree, Sgt Peppers isn't even in The Beatles top 4 albums. Never understood why it gets so much attention over the far superior Abbey Road, Revolver, Rubber Soul and The Beatles. Although A Day In The Life is my favourite song of theirs.
100% agree, Sgt Peppers isn't even in The Beatles top 4 albums. Never understood why it gets so much attention over the far superior Abbey Road, Revolver, Rubber Soul and The Beatles. Although A Day In The Life is my favourite song of theirs.
Just to avoid any confusion, that's 'The White Album'.
I love anything from Rubber Soul onwards.
It's because of what it represented at the time. Unlike the albums both preceding and followng, it does sound like a product of it's time.
In saying that, coming out in the summer of 1967 helped it's legacy too.
You don't want to come out with sweeping statements about those times and what was represented which has to be based on what you read as it was before your time. Things were a lot more diverse then with singles especially bought by a more wide ranging age group. No one in my circle, and in that of any mods,m was sat about gazing at their navels listening to psychedelic stuff, though a lot were. It was Creation, Action, Alan Brown Set, Jimmy James, Geno Washington, none of who set the charts alight but used to pack out clubs. Plus Otis, Tamlaght and a fair sprinkling of people like DesmondvDekker and Prince Buster. A lot of the nostalgia and social statements about those days comes from people who weren't there.
To see what I mean look at the list of number one singles. See what was the biggest selling single of 1967 and kept the Beatles best ever double A side off number one and stopped their run off consecutive number ones. Interesting to see which were the big sellers in 1966 and 1967, better years for music in my opinion as was 1964. The best selling singles are highlighted in yellow.
What is amazing is how many of the songs from those days strike a chord with all age groups even with people in their teens and twenties.Something I don't think will be the case in 50 years with today's music.
1967, to most of us in our teens then was the year listening to the radio was spoilt when that great advocate of freedom and democracy, Tony Benn. banned the pirate radio stations (you had to be about then to appreciate what a breath of fresh air they were, how they altered things and gave bands like the Who and Small Faces exposure they would never have got on the BBC) and gave the BBC a monopoly on what we could listen two and meant sure that anything not to their liking didn't get airtime.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_UK_Singles_Chart_number_ones_of_the_1960s#1967
Well said. I used to listen to Radio Luxemberg with a transistor radio hidden under my pillow at boarding school. Then along came the pirates ... London and Caroline - what a breath of fresh air. The movie "Pirate Radio" is worth a viewing.
Let's have it...
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