suntripper

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 15 posts - 211 through 225 (of 436 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • suntripper
    Participant

      Yup – ordinary language is inadequate. That's where poetry comes in – although not most of what passes for poetry these days.

      in reply to: 2022-05-03 Hannover, Faust #39790
      suntripper
      Participant

        For anyone struggling to get it, I recommend Video DownloadHelper – makes it dead easy.

        suntripper
        Participant

          @Punj Lizard: Far from being "a load of guff", that was an excellent read! Thank you! I particularly enjoyed your take on the resolutions of both albums. We're obviously of like mind here. By the way, as well as 'Zanoni', I also plead guilty to having read 'Autobiography of a Yogi' and 'Siddhartha'. No doubt you've been there too!

          suntripper
          Participant

            @Johnny; @supernaut: I know! Even many Yes fans can't get on with 'Tales', but I love it! I would accept the notion of cutting side 2 right down – the musical ideas on that side probably should only sustain 10 to 12 minutes. However, I place sides 1 and 4 alongside their other very best works, while I'm also very fond of side 3 and I'm glad they felt free enough to go where it took them. Maybe the spirit that enabled that sort of pushing at the edges – truly progressive – is similar to that which animates MP at times – yes, with N.O.X., Folk Flest, etc.

            Tull? It's Songs from the Wood for me! Bit of a concept there? Anyway, it's a wonderful, joyful album!

            suntripper
            Participant

              You're not alone!

              suntripper
              Participant

                Poor old Bulwer-Lytton! He always gets panned for that! It's actually a perfectly reasonable opening. Here is the first sentence in full:

                Quote:
                It was a dark and stormy night; the rain fell in torrents — except at occasional intervals, when it was checked by a violent gust of wind which swept up the streets (for it is in London that our scene lies), rattling along the housetops, and fiercely agitating the scanty flame of the lamps that struggled against the darkness.

                While I can't vouch for the quality of 'Paul Clifford', I have read 'Zanoni' – a profound, fascinating and most certainly well-written work that I would recommend to anyone.

                I don't know what you make of the concepts on which hang 'Tales from Topographic Oceans' and 'The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway' but, if they played a part in the making of two of the best albums of all time, I'm in!

                in reply to: Ancient Astronauts #40154
                suntripper
                Participant

                  @Punj Lizard: Yes, one of the real good guys – and it comes across. Notable that he was Jon Anderson's best man. Technically, Bruford might be better but I actually prefer listening to Alan (and, as a drummer, I expect I've probably just committed some terrible faux-pas as far as the purists are concerned) and I think the post-Close to the Edge material benefitted from his style. He was no slouch, mind you, as Sound Chaser, for example, will demonstrate. I don't know whether you bought Progeny (I'm guessing, yes!) but I remember a review saying that it was Alan that was the revelation on those shows – really driving the band. You were lucky to see them in 1977. My first was a Drama-era show. While Trevor Horn was abysmal, the band, including Alan at the height of his powers, were really on form.

                  Sorry, guys, for the deviation, but if Neil Peart can have a whole thread (and who can forget that one?!) then this is the least Alan deserves.

                  in reply to: Ancient Astronauts #40152
                  suntripper
                  Participant

                    Just want to add: that edition of Prog also features a great article in memory of Alan White, whose passing deserves a mention. Rest in peace, Alan – great drummer and great man.

                    in reply to: Ancient Astronauts #40144
                    suntripper
                    Participant

                      "To make this trivial world sublime, take half a gram of phanerothyme." – Aldous Huxley.

                      I prefer reading between the lines.

                      in reply to: other Bootleg-Exchange-Platform then Dime #40107
                      suntripper
                      Participant

                        Very good idea to mention the Grateful Dead precedent.

                        in reply to: other Bootleg-Exchange-Platform then Dime #40098
                        suntripper
                        Participant

                          @The Other Anders: Just putting it out there as an alternative to archive.org for uploading bootlegs.

                          @dongonz: You might have to prove you're not a robot.

                          in reply to: other Bootleg-Exchange-Platform then Dime #40095
                          suntripper
                          Participant
                            in reply to: New Music #34912
                            suntripper
                            Participant

                              Jeff Beck and Johnny Depp (plus Prince's bass player) – album to come:

                              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpwfPrBn_AQ

                              in reply to: Ancient Astronauts #40123
                              suntripper
                              Participant

                                @dongonz: I'm feeling a 'Buzz' too!

                                (Oh, please yourselves!)

                                in reply to: 2022-05-09 Amsterdam, Paradiso Noord #39861
                                suntripper
                                Participant

                                  Pleased to wake up this morning and find four clips here with a pretty good sound balance. Well done, Niek Wolters!

                                  https://www.youtube.com/c/NiekWolters/videos

                                Viewing 15 posts - 211 through 225 (of 436 total)

                                …hanging on to the trip you're on since 1994