T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2206.1 | Speed kills! | LEDS::BURATI | Too many notes | Fri May 17 1991 13:35 | 15 |
| > If memory serves, he was severely criticized for his speed
> during his heyday. It's pretty obvious that he's not keeping
> the guns of the 90's up nights,so it's interesting to see how
> the concept of "fast" has evolved.
For me the problem I had with Alvin Lee was not that he played with
speed but that his speed was the only noteworthy aspect to his ability.
I've always felt that he was like someone with a huge vocabulary but
nothing to say. Style is infinitely more important than speed. After
all, speed has nothing to do with music, style has everything.
Just my random thoughts.
--rjb
|
2206.2 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Owner of 4 vintage Fenders | Fri May 17 1991 13:55 | 5 |
| I suggest you give a listen to "Detroit Diesel" ... sure, he tries to
blister on here too, but there are also some good straight ahead
rockers as well !
Scary
|
2206.3 | 2 enthusiastic thumbs up! | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Need a hot tune and a cold one | Fri May 17 1991 13:59 | 5 |
|
Hey Jerry, I'd sure love to hear Detroit Deisel if you have it.
I've never really thought of Alvin Lee as a speedster. To me,
he was just a great blues/rocker. I love the tone, sustain
and bluesy feel on the "Change the World" solo.
|
2206.4 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Fri May 17 1991 14:37 | 5 |
| I always liked the song "I can't keep from cryin'" off the first and fairly
rare album "Ten Years After". Very nice song with some interesting lead
work on it. I never heard him do anything like it again.
dbii
|
2206.5 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | ICE :== Intense Coaster Enthusiasts! | Fri May 17 1991 15:45 | 3 |
| I love Alvin Lee. Bought my first 100wt Marshall stack after seeing
the Woodstock movie!! The live version of Good Morning Lil Schoolgirl
rocks hard! My band used to do that and Goin Home...whada workout!
|
2206.6 | | LEDS::BURATI | Too many notes | Fri May 17 1991 17:13 | 2 |
|
Maybe it's just me.
|
2206.7 | Alvin's pick | PAKORA::JHYNDMAN | REBEL WITHOUT A CLUE | Fri May 17 1991 18:29 | 8 |
| Funny this topic should come up right now...only last week my wife was
given one of Alvin Lee's (monogrammed)picks by a friend of the band as
she was really into Ten Years After a long time back.The "SSSHHHH!!"
album has been getting a *LOT* of playtime since!
Big Jim
(who isn't allowed to use the pick!!![and when I did,it didn't make
me play any faster!])
|
2206.8 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Owner of 4 vintage Fenders | Sat May 18 1991 09:00 | 9 |
| Yo Buckster !
A band I was in during highschool did "I'm Goin' Home" too ! It was
more like a finger-fit the way I played it, but in those days, LOUD was
job #1. Me and my Marshall Major (da 200watter) stack and the Ampeg V4
stack took care of that end - nobody seemed to notice the rest.
Scary
|
2206.9 | | PELKEY::PELKEY | YOIKES and AWAY!!! | Mon May 20 1991 11:08 | 24 |
| Strange how no one has mentioned this yet..
Alvin Lee never uses his pinky.
(at least I've never seen him)
MTV has a video the play of one of the more recent Ten Years
After I assume) concerts,,, Alvin Lee just takes off for about 5 minutes.
His stamina was something else... He gets keeps burning,, not
even stopping to breath,,, but again, not once in that tape, did
I see him use his pinky.. everything else though,,, (thumb, fist,
knees, elbows, foot, mike stand, ,,, ,,,)
To be honest, Alvin Lee never set my soul on fire,,, I do like some
of the raw, straight ahead stuff, and A Space In Time has always
been one of my fav. nostalgia albums, but no, he's not keeping
anyone up nights anymore... had he used his pinky,,, ,,, (ahh,
never mind,, just a nit I can't let go..)
A tribute that he's still rockin though,, the man has to be close
to 50 years old at this point,, at least that's about how old
he looked in the video.. (No sarcasm, honest observation)
I just hope I can play with that much fire when I'm close to 50..
|
2206.10 | | DECWIN::KMCDONOUGH | Set Kids/Nosick | Mon May 20 1991 11:53 | 26 |
|
When I was in the 9th grade, my band got a gig playing a dance
sponsored by a Catholic school. Nuns for chaperones, no less. There
were some very red faces about when we broke into "Good Morning Little
School Girl." 8-)
I saw Alvin Lee play in a large club in California (the country club?
I don't remember the name) somewhere around '81 or '82. It was a
*great* show and he really put a lot into it. He was still playing the
same fast licks, too.
Alvin used to take heat for being all speed and no taste. That's kind
of funny now because he couldn't hold a candle to today's fast guns.
But, in its time, "I'm Goin Home" was smokin.
When I think about it, there is probably a direct line between "I'm
Goin Home" and, say, the fast riffs at the end of G+R's "Paradise
City."
Kevin
|
2206.11 | Blast from da past.. | FTMUDG::HENDERSON | Fun with Flesh! | Mon May 20 1991 16:20 | 11 |
|
The album, A Space in Time, remains one of my favorites
from the time period that it came out. Lotta great guitar riffs
on that record. The last album I picked up with Alvin was, Ten
Years Later, doesn't stant up to the earlier stuff in my opinion.
I have always like the sound he was able to get out of that 335.
DonH
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2206.12 | In Flight | RGB::ROST | Make my foam pre-CBS | Mon May 20 1991 17:08 | 13 |
| Anyone remember "In Flight"? This was Alvin's first post-TYA LP, a
two-record set recorded live in London, 1974 I think.
The backup band was Kokomo, a UK soul band in the AWB vein that never
caught on in the US. The overall sound of the album was pretty laid
back for Alvin, he even shared guitar duties with Neil Hubbard (an
underrated player himself), lots of horns, etc.
The final TYA album. "Positive Vibrations", which came out only a few
months earlier sounded like the band was pretty tired, while "In
Flight" seemed pretty energetic.
Brian
|
2206.13 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Tue May 21 1991 13:34 | 5 |
| When I saw TYA in '70 the warm up act made them sound pretty tired...twas that
lil' ole blues band from Tejas, ZZtop...
dbii
|
2206.14 | | LEDS::BURATI | Too many notes | Wed May 22 1991 00:34 | 10 |
|
RE ZZ Top: No contest.
I saw TYA twice back in '69 & '70. They were the headliner at a show
and they cleared the joint in 20 minutes. I stayed through most of it
The bass play was hanging ten at the edge of the stage screaming
"F#%@ YOU" at people streaming across the front of the stage toward
the exits. It was not a pretty sight.
|
2206.15 | | RTOIC::ACROY | OU812? | Thu May 23 1991 10:38 | 14 |
| some infos
Ten Years After played in a little bavarian club, 200 miles from
munich, 2 weeks ago and will perform on a little open air festival
close to munich in some weeks - hope i have the time to go!
btw: can somebody put the basic chord of Goin' Home in here?
the best of tya i have seen so far is the goin home version in the
woodstock movie, which i recently rented. i think it's much better than
the version on "recorded live" (live in frankfurt).
sascha
|
2206.16 | No pinky? No variation | TOOK::DROBINSON | | Thu May 23 1991 16:42 | 19 |
|
Funny that Alvin Lee doesn't use his pinky. I'm pretty sure it was
copying his riffs that got me started using my pinky. Me with
smallish hands and all.
One of the problems with Lee is the repetiveness of his stuff.
I saw him in the early seventies for two sets on one night.
'Twas annoying to see him play and detune his low E string one note
at a time twice in one night. The songs, solos & jokes were the
same etc. I know other bands do that too, which is understandable
if you're talking complex song arrangements, harmonies, choreography
etc. With Ten Years After it was Alvin Lee doing 12 bar 3 chord stuff
with a backup. The other guitar oriented bands of the day would mix it
up much more.
Opening act was James Taylor ;-) Those college bookings...
Dave
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2206.17 | better living through wierd chemistry | LEDS::BURATI | Too many notes | Thu May 23 1991 17:15 | 8 |
|
> Opening act was James Taylor ;-) Those college bookings...
HA! One of the times I saw TYA was at U-Mass and the opening act
was...
THREE DOG NIGHT
|
2206.18 | off track | HAVOC::DESROCHERS_P | I Want More!!! | Fri May 24 1991 09:31 | 15 |
|
re: opening acts - sorry about digressing but two of the
strangest combinations I've seen where the opening act
blew the main act away...
John Mayall with Bruce Springsteen opening at the Curry
Hicks Cage at ZooMass.
Jackson "I'm depressed" Brown getting creamed by Orleans -
two great guitarists running around doing harmony leads with
great vocals. Then he comes out on a stool with an acoustic!!
Whew...
|
2206.19 | more digression | LEDS::BURATI | Too many notes | Fri May 24 1991 11:56 | 4 |
| Here's one. Around 1972 I saw Van Morrison and the opening act was
J. Geils. After a rousing high-energy "boogie" set Van came out and
did "Into the Mystic".
|
2206.20 | Even further off the track... | BEEZER::FLOWERS | Now it's only lukewarm.... | Fri May 24 1991 12:03 | 12 |
|
Here is a nice and supposedly true story, Ian Anderson (alias Jethro
Tull) once received a letter from an unknown guy called Fish asking
if his unknown band called Marillion could be the support act for
Tull's upcoming tour. Ian wrote back and said 'Sorry no'
Then of course Marillion made the big time and Ian Anderson recieved
a letter from a well known guy called Fish asking if Jethro Tull
would come and be the support band for Marillion, and I heard that they
did.........but it was a while back.
J
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2206.21 | | MILNER::WSC100::COLLUM | What?...What? | Fri May 24 1991 13:41 | 6 |
| That's pretty cool.
I've seen Tull twice, and can guarentee that no opening act will steal that
show.
Will
|
2206.23 | Interview in local music rag | CARTUN::BDONOVAN | | Fri Sep 04 1992 08:14 | 16 |
|
Alvin Lee is interviewed in the latest issue of the [New England/Boston]
area newspaper METRONOME.
He notes, wryly, that one aspect of his comeback over the last couple
of years is that the fans go out and buy his old albums...not the
ones he has been recording recently.
He mentions, and I agree, that "I'd Love to Change the World" still
sounds good, despite the fact that its twenty years old.
I still think Ten Years After music is good for summer driving...
good, blunt blues rock to get lost in the roar of the wind rushing
by the open windows!
Brian
|