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Sathington Willoughby

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Everything posted by Sathington Willoughby

  1. All this 75 and after rules out way too much good playing. ^Yes.
  2. I was reading an article on Huffington Post and it was one of the 'Suggested for You' links, and I just had to click it, for obvious reasons lol. Steve Carell's College Yearbook Photo Will Give You Mustache Envy http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/31/steve-carrel-college-yearbook-mustache_n_4703441.html
  3. Yea, definitely one of if not the surprise gem of Coda companion, love the live feel and alt. lyrics. "Boogie all night long!"
  4. lol. Hurry up man, it's been over two weeks! We want to hear your reviews!
  5. Primus San Rafael, CA 03/20/1992 Marin Center Exhibit Hall Lineup: Les Claypool - Bass, Larry Lalonde - Guitar, Tim Alexander - Drums Setlist: Here Come the Bastards Jellikit > Pudding Time American Life John the Fisherman (Yellow Sock) Seas of Cheese Those Damned Blue-Collar Tweekers Jerry Was A Race Car Driver Fish On Harold of the Rocks > Grandad's Little Ditty > Harold of the Rocks Eleven Is It Luck? To Defy the Laws of Tradition The Intruder > Tommy the Cat - Angelo Moore sits in on Bastards - Todd Huth sits in on Tommy the Cat - Thieves tease during Pudding Time - Bed's Too Big without You tease before John the Fisherman - Kashmir tease before Seas of Cheese - Master of Puppets tease during Is It Luck? - Smoke on the Water tease during Tweekers
  6. Primus Berkeley, CA xx/xy/1988 Lineup: Les Claypool - Bass, Todd Huth - Guitar, Tim \"Curveball\" Wright - Drums Setlist: Is It Luck? Temporary Phase To Defy the Laws of Tradition Eleven Too Many Puppies Shattering Song Tommy the Cat Train Kept a Rolling
  7. So yea, I agree with donald, PG was one of the best IMO. Some nice differences on most tracks, plus EMIT of course, which I agree with the author of the article is superior to In the Light. If only it had a bassline...
  8. 1. Coda 2. III 3. Physical Graffiti 4. II 5. Presence 6. Houses of the Holy 7. IV 8. I 9. ITTOD
  9. FYI I found the bit that they showed, 1:08-1:53. So 45 seconds, not 10 lol.
  10. I saw it, there was like 10 seconds of Zep. Then again, it was about American music. Oh well.
  11. This is an excerpt from the all-new November/December 2013 issue of Guitar Aficionado magazine. For the rest of this story, plus features on pre-War Martins, the Healdsburg Guitar Festival and a new photo book called 108 Rock Star Guitars, head to the Guitar Aficionado Online Store. House Rocker: Best known for his television and Broadway roles, actor John Stamos has also enjoyed a three-decade career supporting the Beach Boys in more ways than one. By Dan Epstein | Photo by Patrick Hoelck On Yahoo! Screen’s new online show Losing It with John Stamos, celebrities sit down with the former Full House heartthrob to recall their first sexual encounters, often in hilariously cringe-worthy fashion. But as awkward debuts go, it’s pretty hard to beat the first time Stamos ever shared a stage with the Beach Boys…and Jimmy Page. The year was 1985, and Stamos—then a 21-year-old actor coming off a breakthrough run on General Hospital and a lead role as a wannabe rock star on the short-lived CBS series Dreams — had been invited to join his all-time-favorite band on drums for a few numbers during their massive Fourth of July concerts in Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. “Jeffrey Foskett, the Beach Boys’ guitarist, was the guy who got me in to meet my heroes,” Stamos recalls. “And he was the one who asked them, ‘Can John play ‘Barbara Ann’ and some other songs with us?’ And then, the day before the gig, Jeffrey told me, ‘Jimmy Page is playing guitar!’ ” Foskett was deputized to run through the songs in advance with the British guitar legend, so he paid a visit to Page’s hotel suite and took Stamos with him. “We went up to Jimmy’s room,” Stamos recalls, “and he immediately offered us a shot of Jack Daniel’s. I barely drank light beer in those days, and it just burned my throat. But it’s Jimmy Page saying, ‘Hey, here’s some Jack,’ so fuck it. “Then Jeff got all obsessed with Jimmy’s guitar that had a B-Bender on it, because he’d never seen one before. So he and Jimmy’s guitar guy were over in another room playing with it, and I found myself sitting alone with Jimmy Page, just the two of us. There were a couple of acoustic guitars, and he grabbed one and put it in my hands and said, ‘All right—what are we doing?’ I said, ‘Uh, I think you’re playing “Barbara Ann,” right?’ He said, ‘Right. What key?’ I told him it was in F sharp, and he said, ‘I don’t like to solo in F sharp. Why is it in F sharp?’ I was like, ‘I don’t know, man!’ ‘Fun, Fun, Fun’ was in E flat, and he didn’t like that key, either. So I’m sitting there, showing Jimmy Page how to play these three-chord songs. I’m, like, 21 years old. I could barely play guitar and had no business teaching him anything!” The situation became more nerve wracking at the Philadelphia show, where, in addition to performing for an estimated one million viewers, Stamos was tasked with soothing Page after enthusiastic concertgoers near the stage flashed him the “devil horns.” “He said, ‘I think they’re hexing me!’ ” Stamos recalls. “I was like, ‘No, no, it’s a good thing!’ ” - See more at: http://www.guitaraficionado.com/house-rocker-john-stamos-has-enjoyed-a-three-decade-career-supporting-the-beach-boys-in-more-ways-than-one.html#sthash.Jl4oOUVE.dpuf
  12. The Beach Boys July 4th 1985. Philadelphia PA (Ben Franklin Parkway, w/John Stamos, Joan Jett, Jimmy Page, The Oak Ridge Boys, Mr T & Christopher Cross) July 4th 1985. Washington DC (Washington Memorial, w/Brian Wilson, 9:15 p.m., w/John Stamos, Joan Jett, Jimmy Page, The Oak Ridge Boys, Mr. T, Christopher Cross, New Edition & The Four Tops) Yes, Mr. T on drums. Can't make this stuff up!
  13. A great tune, no doubt. Definitely worthy of all the praise. Here's a couple others you might like. ^Samples 'Dream On' by Aerosmith
  14. The one and only! I also love Jimmy's pot-belly hanging out of that weird shirt.
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