T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
412.1 | Playing the Fool | COMICS::LANG | More Trouble Every Day... | Tue May 02 1989 21:00 | 14 |
|
Hi,
Well, thanks to various record fairs that I've been to recently,
I have managed to pick up 4 GG albums..... At the time that they
were big (were they ever "big" !!!), I was too young to appreciate
them, but listening to their material...well...its too good for
words, it really is !!
Cheers
Harv
|
412.2 | Never really heard them, but..... | WELMTS::GREENB | Bob and Kim take on the world | Wed May 03 1989 11:40 | 7 |
| Harvey, Gentle Giant were never really 'big' in the UK. They were
quite popular, but I think they were overshadowed by other 'techno'
(horrible word, but that was the label they and many others had
to endure) bands who were more popular. Apparently, though, they
were a lot bigger in Europe, especially, I think Italy.
Bob
|
412.3 | three friends | COGMK::KUHN | Schnauzering | Tue May 09 1989 22:46 | 7 |
| hi bob,
yea, i have "Interview". its real hard to find an import of "Glass
House" here in the states. It suprising a band with that kind of
talent just fades out. Technically, they were superior to most other
techno-bands like Yes ect. They are probably session players now
or something like that.
|
412.4 | It's on the tip of my brain...... | WELMTS::GREENB | Kim and Bob, joint MBNITC | Wed May 10 1989 10:45 | 10 |
| Hello all!
I'm trying to remember who GG were before they became GG. Were they
the group who had a psychedelic smasheroo with 'Kites'? I can't
remember the name of the group, or if that was them, but they were
certainly around at that time.
Where's Alan Trevennor when you need him?
Bob
|
412.5 | Simon Dupree & The Big Sound | AYOU30::PAULC | Goodbye Igor | Wed May 10 1989 10:54 | 5 |
| Bob, "Kites" was a hit for Simon Dupree & The Big Sound, but I
had no idea they mutated into Gentle Giant...
Cheers,
�Paul�
|
412.6 | | WELMTS::GREENB | Kim and Bob, joint MBNITC | Wed May 10 1989 13:34 | 4 |
| Thats them, I think, Paul. I was getting confused between SD & the
BS, and Sounds Incorporated....
Bob
|
412.7 | SD & BS | COMICS::LANG | More Trouble Every Day... | Wed May 10 1989 13:48 | 9 |
| Yes,
Simon Dupree & the BS contained all 3 of the Shulman brothers with
Derek being "Simon Dupree". Drummer , John Weathers, used to play
with Graham Bond and also the Grease Band.
Harv
|
412.8 | more trivia | LEROUF::MERRICK | Always verify your witchcraft | Wed May 10 1989 13:58 | 4 |
|
John Weathers was also better known as Pugwash.
Ken
|
412.9 | A little Giant info... | TYCHO::HALL | I did not cavort | Fri May 12 1989 00:03 | 134 |
| Great to see a note about Gentle Giant. They have always been one
of my very favorite bands. I really don't know what they are
all up to now, though I did read recently that one of the Schulmans
(Derek, I think) is now a big cheese at *mumble* record company
(Polydor comes to mind). Jeesh, I'm a wealth of information, huh?
About a year ago, the subject of Gentle Giant came up on USENET's
rec.music.misc. Chris Koenigsberg posted the following. He replied
'yes' to my request to re-post here. He added that the mention
of the album titled PHOTOGRAPH is an error - he was thinking of
a tune from CIVILIAN. Here it is - enjoy!
-Dan Hall
Posted with permission
Newsgroups: rec.music.misc
Path: decwrl!hplabs!sri-unix!husc6!bbn!rochester!PT.CS.CMU.EDU!
Andrew.cmu.edu!ckk+
Subject: Re: Gentle Giant Challenge
Posted: 8 Mar 88 04:12:03 GMT
Organization: Carnegie Mellon University
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
I get a little carried away and emotional in discussing Gentle Giant, the
world's greatest rock band which was nearly completely ignored by the record
buying public and finally gave up after producing some of the world's greatest
albums and some incredible live sets.
Here's how I would rank the Gentle Giant LP's. I'm surprised that Erland S.
places In A Glass House so low on his list; perhaps because he's not a native
English speaker? That album has some of the most profound and moving lyrics
I've ever heard and read.
1. Octopus, 2. In A Glass House, 3. Free Hand, 4. The Power And the Glory, 6.
Three Friends, 7. Playing the Fool, 8. Interview, 9. Acquiring the Taste, 10.
Giant (i.e. untitled first album with the same cover as American pressing of
Three Friends)
11. The Missing Piece, 12. Giant For a Day, 13. Civilian
The first ten Gentle Giant albums on my list are actually my ten all-time
favorite albums in the history of rock music (I don't know what the tenth
would be; perhaps Sergeant Pepper, or Starless and Bible Black by King
Crimson). Octopus and In A Glass House belong to what I'd call the exclusive
elite category of "absolutely perfect albums" and the others come pretty damn
close to being perfect too.
Gentle Giant's first album was good but was only a rock band (there's even a
so-so cheap bluesy-rock-n-roll jam on it, but their real forte was to be in
classical composition-group arrangement). The second, Acquiring the Taste, had
some superhuman works on it (like Pantagruel's Nativity, with the
quintessential synthesized beginning) and showed the promise of what was to
come. Three Friends achieved the heights of wonder (I still cry over childhood
friendships when I hear this conceptual album). Up to this point they had
trouble with drummers; there's a different one on each of these albums.
Finally the last drummer died in a motorcycle accident (a real tragedy, he was
the best of all) and they got one more (John Weathers) for "Octopus", who
stayed with the group forever after.
And "Octopus" was the ultimate perfect album from the standpoints of lyrics,
composition, performance, production, arrangement, cover design, etc (KNOTS is
the greatest song of all time - a tantalizing, terrifying, confusing a capella
madrigal based on R.D.Laing's psychological brain-benders, alternated suddenly
with childlike xylophones and crunching metal guitar-synth riffs). But it did
so poorly in sales that the next album was never even released in the United
States. And that next album was "In A Glass House" which is less dense than
Octopus but still perfect, in my opinion. I will never get over my hatred for
the general record-buying public which ignored, disliked, or never heard about
this pair of ultimate albums.
�
The team of the three Shulman brothers and keyboard wizard Kerry Minnear has
never and can never be equalled for composing, group-arranging, and performing
wondrous music. One huge mega-brain melded out of four. Plus a kickass guitar
and drummer keeping it honest, heavy, and grooving.
Glass House did poorly too so Phil Shulman left the group. They got a new U.S.
record label and tried with "Free Hand" to reach a bigger audience. Free Hand
is still a fantastic rock album - it just uses a few less overdubbed
instruments, and is closer to their live sound. (including the fantastic a
capella work which they actually do reproduce live on stage)
Then came The Power And the Glory. Another great conceptual album about
politics and leaders and the corruption of power, with intricate music, mostly
with their more live rather than overdubbed sound. The song "SO SINCERE" was
on this album. It goes from a bizarre classic cello-violin-saxophone intro
into some real heavy odd stuff and fascinating lyrics ("....Yes. That is to
say, No......understanding.....Wrong. He makes his promise right, with your
hand. You'll never know why") And by the way, "Cogs in Cogs" is from this
album......
next was "Interview" which had the underlying continuous theme that it was
about being a band on the road. ("Can you describe your music?" and they all
start talking at once saying completely different things in a fantastic jumble
of words. Perfect!!) They were actually touring a lot at this time. Some great
rock and roll numbers and heavy rock playing and composing, another great a
capella work. This was the last great Gentle Giant studio album.
The live album "Playing the Fool" came out next. It's a really good live
album. If you never got to see the band in concert, this album will give you a
taste of what you missed. If you were one of those fortunate to catch them,
this will remind you of the joy you will always savor in your heart.
(everybody sings, a capella. Now everybody plays recorders. Now they play
cello and violin and saxophone. Now they all play drums. Now they rock out
wildly. Now they crunch with contrapuntal elaborate Bach-like electric rock
music)
Then came "The Missing Piece". The title made us suspicious before we even
heard it. There were a couple of songs which were reminiscent of the old
sound, even a long classic Memories of Old Days, but it wasn't weaving quite
the same tangled web.......
And then there was "Giant For a Day", "Photograph", and "Civilian". These are
just a blur to me; there's some decent rock and roll moments ("I'll bet you
thought we couldn't do it...." No, I just knew it was the end when you did!!!)
but it's like seeing your former best friend after a near-fatal auto accident
and a lobotomy. Rather than intricate compositions and the magic of Kerry
Minnear, they feature the lead guitar of Gary Green. They got signed to some
new label which tried to make them into rock stars, told them what clothes to
wear, and even told them to STOP SMILING because BIG STARS DON'T SMILE!!!!!!!!
This is pathetic.
The last three are so different, so disappointing, that I'd hesitate to even
consider them as being produced by the same band. Same people, perhaps, but
the Giant was gone.
Finally there were two compilations. One was called "Prententious.....For the
Sake of It". I forget what the second was called.
Posted with permission
[The second compilation was called GIANT STEPS - THE FIRST FIVE YEARS. -Dan]
|
412.10 | Some Vinyl still available | COMICS::LANG | Jings, crivens, help ma boab | Sun Jun 18 1989 11:40 | 11 |
|
FYI....
"Playing the Fool" has been re-released on CD and also LP on Essential
records. Also, "Octopus" is available on Import at your friendly
Virgin megastore.
Cheers
Harvey
|
412.11 | The Power and the Glory on CD ! | CSC32::A_PARRACO | Make it so, Mr. LaForge | Thu Jun 29 1989 20:17 | 8 |
|
I just purchased the only copy of "The Power and the Glory" in
Denver or Colorado Springs, it was out on Capitol's GREEN LINE
of re-releases ............and it was only $ 10.98 !
It sounds AWESOME on CD, every bit as good as I'd hoped for !
- Andy
|
412.12 | GG CDs on Road Goes On Forever label | ILLUSN::SORNSON | Are all your pets called 'Eric'? | Mon Jan 03 1994 16:27 | 29 |
| This is a cross-over question (of sorts) from the MUSIC conference note
557 (on Gentle Giant).
Here in the USA, in a music chain-store called Tower Records, I
recently found several GG CDs on the Road Goes On Forever label. They
were (rather) high-priced imports. I purchased
The Missing Piece and
Giant For A Day
and noticed that
Power and The Glory
was also on this label, though it was also available on a cheaper label
(budget priced, actually) -- Capitol, I think. [I bought the cheaper
version a while ago, and so wasn't inclined to shell out twice the
price for the same thing.]
My question is, is Interview or Playing the Fool available on this
label (which has a London address)? If so, I will look forward to
completing my GG CD collection. [I have everything but these two and
Civilian on CD ... and Civilian I'm willing to skip. I even managed to
find In A Glass House at Tower Records!]
Thanks in advance if anyone knows anything (which you can take any
way you want :-).
-mark.
|
412.13 | GG Records | SHIPS::WHITWOOD_N | Nigel Whitwood | Tue Feb 01 1994 13:51 | 9 |
| Playing the Fool is available (but I dunno what label).
Missing Piece isn't available (going by HMVs CD Catalogue but this
didn't list Glass House either.
Out of interest one of the Schulman brothers is now a record producer in
the US (produced the Sugar Cubes apparently).
The drummer (Weathers ?) plays the pubs with The Man Band.
|
412.14 | | TASTY::JEFFERY | Children need to learn about X in school | Mon Jun 06 1994 09:26 | 4 |
| I saw a review of some Gentle Giant records (sorry CD's) on re-release
in Q this month
Mark.
|
412.15 | | NEST::PAPIA | | Fri Jun 10 1994 18:03 | 8 |
|
re:last
Which ones?
Vinny
|
412.16 | A good year for GG | STAR::BENSON | My other fiddle is a Strad | Mon Feb 17 1997 18:02 | 40 |
| (Cross-posted from MUSIC, for any lurking GG fans...)
BTW, you can always get all the Gentle Giant info you need (and then
some) at
www.cs.umass.edu/~barrett/gentlegiant.html
<<< NAPALM::DISK$COLORADO:[NOTES$LIBRARY]MUSIC.NOTE;2 >>>
-< MUSIC V4 >-
================================================================================
Note 557.15 Gentle Giant (on CD?) 15 of 15
STAR::BENSON "My other fiddle is a Strad" 25 lines 17-FEB-1997 10:51
-< A good year for GG >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In case anyone's still listening... A couple of Gentle Giant tribute
CDs are about to be released. One is a "fan" tribute, done by people
from their internet mailing list, but including a couple of semi-famous
people like Mike Keneally and the late Kevin Gilbert. You can read all
about this one (and even hear some of it) at
www.quackwatch.com/GT/
They're taking advance orders now for shipping on March 15.
The other one is from Mellow Records in Italy, a prog rock specialist.
Theirs should be available in 2-3 weeks. Both of these are 2-CD sets,
btw... The reason I know so much about them is that I have songs on
both. Ex-DECcie Lance Levine also sings on em.
There are also some recent GG releases. The best is "Out of the Woods",
a live BBC concert. "The Last Steps", another live one, just came out a
couple of months ago. But "Out.." is much much better. A 2-CD
compilation of stuff from their first 5 albums also came out last year:
"Edge of Twilight" is the name. Believe it or not, ANOTHER live release,
this one from the King Biscuit Flower Hour, is also rumoured. Of course
it's impossible to find any of these outside of mail order specialists!
Tom
|