Jump to content

reids

Members
  • Posts

    3,977
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by reids

  1. 16 hours ago, SteveAJones said:

    Oh, no that's much too far to travel for any film premier however I do hope to see this documentary soon and eventually own it on dvd.

    The Ventures co-founding member Don Wilson, 86, no longer performs in Japan with them, but I was fortunate to see him play here a few times.

    I hope Don and everyone associated with this project who can attend have a truly great time tomorrow night in Malibu.

     

    Ok, very cool. Steve. I met Nokie Edwards (R.I.P.) in Nashville, TN at Muriel Anderson’s Night of Guitar in the early 2000’s (probably 2004). It was during summer NAMM weekend. I hope it’s released on dvd/blu ray, too!!!

    R😎

  2. I think EVH is trying to quell rumors of his poor health. Perhaps, he’s using his sons Instagram account to promote vh reunion & tour next year . Either DLR is out of the band (with Sammy & Michael Anthony) or milking it to sell tickets for Vegas right now then tour together next year.  We’ll see. 

    R😎

    4DD9FEF3-7691-4495-954A-23346DE4CB15.jpeg

    467243F6-9A5D-45FF-8CBF-9A8C6086C35C.jpeg

    2F67F240-753A-4601-8F15-22C96FC2CB36.jpeg

    1EBC0C2A-4B21-43DC-A7CD-354C3BB894B9.jpeg

  3. On 8/25/2019 at 8:46 AM, John M said:

    How are they compared to the original releases?  The original Kings is amazing to start, as is that 1978 concert from Different Stages - I wonder how that concert remaster is and how the bonus tracks are.  Most of all, how much is All the World's a Stage improved?  The original release was on the muddy side.  Thanks.

    All three are improved, especially A Farewell To Kings. Thanks for being patient. The bonus tracks add value to the collection, too. My favorites are Jacob Moon and the Big Wreck covers. 

    R😎

  4. 2 hours ago, luvlz2 said:

    Cool, glad you enjoyed it! The last time they were in my area they co-headlined with Alice Cooper and Edgar Winter in 2017 and I'm hoping they return one more time!

    They have a new album due soon (which was recorded in Nashville) and touring next year, as long as everyone stays healthy.

    R😎

  5. 1 hour ago, luvlz2 said:

    I believe what Gorman says. What reason would he have to lie? In particular I'm wondering how much this (Robinson turning down Page's offer to team up to write songs together) really affected Jimmy Page. I'm starting to think it affected him so badly that it is the reason he hasn't made any new music. It's all really sad.

    That along with RP not doing anything studio or live w/ JP since 2007 O2 show.

    R😎

  6. On 10/8/2019 at 11:07 AM, June72 said:

    Seeing DP in Philly on Thursday. Really excited, but I'm also a little skeptical of how they've aged. Has anyone else seen them on this tour?

    Saw them in Atlanta a few weeks ago. They were at their best & Gillan Sang better than previous times I’ve seen them over the past decade. His golf game has improved, too (I hear). Maybe hanging out with Alice Cooper on a recent tour has helped him focus.

    R😎 

    34119C13-8DDC-4F3C-9A9C-6C0503AD770E.jpeg

    4748958F-1278-45A7-AABC-21E6F70065E9.jpeg

    6F4509ED-F4FA-4656-A5D2-EFC203ADC7BD.jpeg

    68A8106D-1D5E-44D9-8DA8-CA964A7495E0.jpeg

  7. 1 hour ago, porgie66 said:

    Haha, I didn't mention that because I believe Bonzo was miming to the original soundtrack which has Ringo on drums. 

    😆👍🥁

    R😎

  8. 5 hours ago, porgie66 said:

    Yes, he played on a few tracks throughout the 70's with people like Jimmy Stevens (1971) , Roy Wood (1979), Paul McCartney ( Beware My Love outtake) and Sir Paul's Back To The Egg session, which is where that pic was taken.  He might be on Lulu's Everbody's Got the Clap , but I'm not convinced. He played on  Lord Sutch and Heavy Friends but that was recorded in '69. I wish he had guested with more people. I love hearing him support other bands, but most of these were not so good IMO. I wish he had the opportunity to play with someone like Stevie Wonder, or some soul and funk artists that he loved. That would have been epic. Or Supertramp!

    Don’t forget Son of Dracula (1974 comedy/music/horror film) w/ Harry Nilsson’s band. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Son_of_Dracula_(1974_film)

    R😎

  9. 7 hours ago, luvlz2 said:

    Black Crowes Drummer Steve Gorman's New Book: 7 Wildest Tales About the Band

    'Hard to Handle: The Life and Death of the Black Crowes' paints a picture of a group in constant turmoil

    By JOSEPH HUDAK

    BlackCrowes.thumb.jpg.ac5528c2d170e4631a7b5ef6658d3217.jpg

    "At the very least," Steve Gorman writes in his new tell-all about the Black Crowes, "I can tell you what happened from my point of view." As the band's drummer since its nascent days as Mr. Crowe's Garden up until the Black Crowes' implosion in 2014, Gorman has seen his share of rock & roll drama from behind the kit. In Hard to Handle: The Life and Death of the Black Crowes -- A Memoir, written with Steven Hyden, he distills his 27 years with the group into a satisfying and unexpectedly emotional read.

    From onstage fights between the famously quarreling Robinson brothers, singer Chris and guitarist Rich, to backstage run-ins with Aerosmith on the Crowes' first major tour, Gorman paints a picture of a band that just couldn't get out of its own way. More often than not, fractures involved money and control, along with a large helping of ego -- which Gorman says scuttled the band's tour with JImmy Page, sending the Led Zeppelin guitarist hurrying back to London.

    Eventually, Gorman had enough. After one glass-breaking altercation between the siblings, he determined to quit. "I wanted to kill both of them," he writes. "I wanted to kill the Black Crowes."

    Here are seven of the wildest tales in Gorman's account of one of rock's most dysfunctional bands.

    1. After the band signed with Rick Rubin's Def American label, the producer asked them to change their name to Kobb Kounty Krows -- K.K.K.

    Rubin didn't like the group's original name of Mr. Crowe's Garden, and he suggested a moniker that both nodded to the Robinson brothers' home state of Georgia and was provocative. Attention-grabbing or not, the allusion to the Klan didn't sit well with the band. "How about we kick your ass right here in this bar tonight? That'll get some attention,' Gorman recalls Chris Robinson threatening Rubin. In the end, the band changed its name, fortunately to the Black Crowes.

    2. Gorman once tried to kick Liam Gallagher's ass for slagging the Crowes onstage at Glastonbury.

    When Oasis played Glastonbury in 1995, Gorman was watching side stage after the Black Crowes' set when he heard -- or thought he heard -- Liam Gallagher say to the crowd, "It's nice to get that silly Southern shit out of the way so you can hear some real music.' Incensed, and admittedly drunk, Gorman forced his way into Oasis' backstage trailer with a bottle of Jack Daniel's and waited for Gallagher to come offstage. "This fucking kid is about to learn more than he ever wanted to about silly Southern shit," Gorman writes. Cooler heads in the Crowes camp prevailed and persuaded the drummer to leave, but Gorman asked Liam about the insult six years later when the Crowes toured with Oasis. "What? No!" Gallagher said. "I thought it was a proper fucking rock band."

    3. Not interested in partying with his bandmates after a triumphant gig in New Orleans, Rich Robinson broke Gorman's cardinal rule of touring: He drove home in the bus without the rest of the band.

    According to the drummer, he, Chris, and the rest of the Crowes wanted to see Peter Holsapple play a solo set across the town after their own gig ended. Rich wanted to head immediately back to Atlanta. Reaching a compromise, they planned to meet Rich at the bus at 2 a.m. to head home. But when they arrived, both Rich and the band bus were gone. "Even Chris, on his worst fucking day, would never take the bus," Gorman writes. "That's never happened in the history of bands. It's unforgivable." Rich never apologized, says Gorman. Instead, the guitarist asked the band to get him his own bus.

    4. Gorman was witness to some epic fights between the Robinson brothers, including one in San Antonio where he feared they'd actually kill each other.

    The incident started when Chris tried to get his brother to play more cover songs in the Crowes' set. At first, they just hurled insults -- "Go ahead, walk away, you fat piece of shit," Chris taunted Rich, who replied, "Go do some more drugs, you fucking poser, you fucking alcoholic!' Then it got physical, with Chris throwing beer cans and the pair wrestling their way into a dressing room mirror surrounded by light bulbs. Busted glass was soon everywhere. Gorman thought someone was going to die; "Let's end it now before someone cuts open a vein and bleeds out."

    5. The Black Crowes were excited to be the house band at Howard Stern's 60th birthday party in New York -- until Chris Robinson asked, "How much?"

    The shock jock was an early supporter of the Black Crowes, so Stern's team thought they'd be the perfect choice to play his all-star birthday tribute at New York's Hammerstein Ballroom in 2014. The plan was to do it for free to repay Stern for his fandom, but Chris wasn't having it. "Fuck Howard Stern. I don't owe that motherfucker anything," he said, according to Gorman, who claims the singer wanted $150,000 personally to do the gig. He didn't get it, and he forbade his bandmates from playing it without him. "The real Chris Robinson is the angriest person I've ever know," writes Gorman.

    6. Rich Robinson's snub of Jimmy Page derailed the Black Crowes' 55-date tour with the Led Zeppelin guitarist after just 11 shows.

    The pairing of Page with the Crowes gave the dysfunctional band a shot in the arm in 2000 and set them up for a successful year of touring. But following an appearance on The Tonight Show, Page, who was battling back problems, mysteriously disappeared, and the tour was cancelled. Gorman learned the real reason why Page left from the man himself a year and a half later. According ot the drummer's recollection, Page told him that he offered to write songs with the Robinson brothers for their next record, but Rich blew him off with a "No thanks! ... We don't need more songs." "I was insulted," Page said to Gorman, who furiously called the Crowes' manager and told him, "I'm driving to Connecticut, and I'm going to kill Rich in his home."

    7. Gorman dreamed of quitting the band for years, until one incident finally forced his hand. Not surprisingly, it involved money.

    On the eve of a new tour celebrating the anniversary of the band's debut album, Chris Robinson demanded a larger percentage of the Crowes' pie. Specifically, he wanted all of Gorman's share. "Chris wanted 75 percent of all the band's income. That was quite an upgrade from the 33 1/3 percent share he had been receiving," writes Gorman, who said no way to becoming a salaried member of the band he co-founded. "And that was the end of the Black Crowes."

    https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/black-crowes-book-steve-gorman-wild-stories-890664/

     

    Yep. I’ve seen some of it first hand having grown up in the southeastern  US.

    One of the most talented, but dysfunctional groups in the history of music.

    R😎

     

  10. I’d like to see the three surviving members and Jason Bonham footage at Headley Grange (JB footage already recorded/exists per JB’s Instagram)  recording parts or entire songs from Led Zeppelin’s catalog. Officially released as part of the documentary or on the dvd/blu ray as extra/bonus.

    R😎

  11. On 9/30/2019 at 11:24 AM, reids said:

    I think the singles set works for RP, but as JP says, Led Zeppelin were never a singles band, so I doubt we’ll see a singles set. We’ll see though.

    R😎

    Maybe only in the Japanese market or a bootleg set of singles but probably not a US or a UK official version. 

    R😎

  12. 6 hours ago, SteveAJones said:

    I don't think sobriety is the issue here at all. Many wildly successful older musicians that have nothing left to prove seek only to be at peace with themselves, and wealth allows them to do only that which they choose to do. It can make for stunningly staid or uncontemporary musical directions, albums, and tours but their motivation to do any of it is primarily to please themselves. 

    Agreed. Priorities change with maturity. 

    R😎

×
×
  • Create New...