Jump to content

danelectro59

Members
  • Posts

    1,405
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by danelectro59

  1. I loved cassettes and had a million or so at one point, but time and many moves have depleted that collection. I have about 3 dozen or so still left but don't play them anymore as they're so old i'm afraid they will get destroyed if I put them in the deck. :o

    Even more bazaar is that my brother in law collects old 8 track tapes and he probably has at least a thousand of them. I don't know if they're worth anything, but it's pretty damn neat to see one of those hunks of plastic with Led Zeppelin on it.

  2. man, i can't believe i missed this thread.

    i saw Alice for the first time in early 1970 when i was a wee lad of 14.

    it was at a small venue called the the Birmingham (MI) Palladium. they had just released the "Love it to Death" LP w/Eighteen as the single and at the time, i had never seen guys with such long hair. it was almost down to their bums and they were all very tall and extrememly skinny, almost anorexic and wore matching silver space suits. but dayum' could they rock. they started their set with a song called "Sunrise" as i was hypnotized for the entire show.

    i saw them several times after that and enjoyed all of the shows, but that first one was truly special and will stick in my memory forever.

  3. another one i think is great is Sophie B Hawkins. Not exactly a household name, but worth a mention. Seems that Janis is the crowd favorite and although you can't deny the impact she's had on rock & roll, for some reason i don't share the same opinion of her. In fact she rather turned me off.

  4. I'd always wanted to start a fanny thread. ;)

    I actually saw these girls at the old East Town in Detroit and that would have been around 1971. If memory serves me correctly, they shared the bill with Iggy/The Stooges and Illusion. Fanny kicked fanny ;)

  5. Hear, hear.

    Can't believe it's been a half century since that tragic day. Can't say I remember since I was 10 days short of three, but I remember people talking when I was a wee lad and the music was so special. It's hard to say where Buddy would have taken rock had he lived, but one thing's for sure, he gave us some timeless tunes while he was here. RIP Buddy Holly, Richie Valens and The Big Bopper (Baaaby!)

  6. He was correcting you because you over-exaggerated the length of the song.

    Danalectro59, I used to feel the exact same way you do, and your first post on the thread reflected my exact thoughts.

    I could find plenty of killer drum beats by Bonzo such as the intro on When The Levee Breaks, or NFBM, but after listening to ALS for a few consecutive times, I now realize how amazing that song is. See I used to hate the fast paced rhythm of the song...no mellow melody, no killer solo, and it sounded the same all throughout the song. However, i understand that every LZ song has its background, there's a mood in each song.

    In other words, when I hear When The Levee Breaks, I think of a huge storm approaching, a hurricane preparing to blow an entire city away; only because the roots of the song come from a blues song about a great flood that happened long ago. Same thing for ALS; achilles as we know was one of the greatest warriors ever, thus thinking about war, battling, fighting, etc..makes the feel and rhythm of the song a lot fitting. You kinda have to put yourself in the moment, and you'll fell the epicness.

    Kashmir, another song that puts my mind in the middle of a desert, or the middle east.

    I now like a lot of song I didn't like when I was younger, and viceversa, but it's all because I didn't put my mind in it. The Rover can say that it's a song for 12 year olds, I however HATED that song when I was at that age. As you grow your taste changes obviously, and it's true that to each its own, but I never hurts to see or hear things from a different perspective once in a while ;)

    First off, I respect what you say.

    Now, to the response to LSOHHB song length, i did say i thought it was twice as long because it does seem like that. It drones on and on with the same piano riff. It wasn't something to take literally, which reminded me of a court room cross examination.

    To what you say about ALS is partly true, but i've yet to read a quote from any music journalist or rock historian who has stated ALS as LZ's epic moment. None, nada, zilch. Kashmir or STH are the front runners, for sure, but Dazed and Confused is up there as well. Having said that, it may not be entirely ALS's fault. By the time they recorded and released it, the epicness of Zep had probably worn off a bit. I've stated that Presence is one of the best albums by the group, simply because it does sound more like them live than any other one they did. I just can't accept Achilles as the most powerful piece ever done by them. No use continuing on this for me, but I do enjoy the conversation.

×
×
  • Create New...