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Tippaporn

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Everything posted by Tippaporn

  1. I could play the whole album. Their cover of Lou Reed's Sweet Jane was a standout.
  2. I had bought their '72 All The Young Dudes album solely on the strength of the LP's title track. What a pleasant and satisfying surprise after getting it home and listening to the rest of the tracks.
  3. I appreciate your personal feedback on those numbers, JetsetBkk. Dave Berry with the Ray Davies penned This Strange Effect recorded in '65.
  4. John Lee Hooker's No More Doggin' first recorded in '53. This is a later version.
  5. A live cover version of John Lee Hooker's No More Doggin' at The Marquee Club off of their '68 Scratching The Surface album.
  6. Don't think I ever heard of these guys stateside. The last track, Groundhog, is a wonderful blues number. I gave it a second listen.
  7. They were a wonderful progressive band. Radio Free Europe was their first non-album single back in '81 and got a lot of airplay.
  8. Led Zeppelin with Going To California off of their '71 Led Zeppelin IV album.
  9. Al Stewart with Road To Moscow off of his '73 Past, Present And Future LP. "Roads To Moscow" is one of Stewart's epic songs, he is reputed to have read forty books researching it. Stewart's management tells us, "the narrator is a Russian soldier who fought for Russia, but was captured briefly by the Germans."
  10. Yes featuring mandolin on Wonderous Stories off of their '77 Going For The One LP.
  11. Another favourite song featuring mandolin is R.E.M.'s Losing My Religion off of their '91 Out Of Time album.
  12. Those are a couple of very excellent ones, bannork. And another by Rod the Mod. Maggie May off of his '71 Every Picture Tells A Story LP. Ray Jackson of Lindisfarne plays mandolin both on this tune and Stewart's Madolin Wind.
  13. Cliff Richard and The Shadows with On The Beach from '64. That wraps up the trip down memory lane circa '64 covering a goodly portion of the Pop Weekly Magazine's Britain's Top Thirty from 29 August '64.
  14. The Rolling Stones performing It's All Over Now in June of '64.
  15. Cilla Black with It's For You and introduced by Paul & John.
  16. Early British rock 'n roll. Wonderful, init? The B-side, You Went Away, should bring back some memories, too, then.
  17. Boat On The River by Styx off of their '79 Cornerstone LP. I never cared for Styx's music. But this song I like. A far southside Chicago product, prior to their super success as Styx they used to be called TW4. I remember they'd do gigs at local high school sock hops.

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