Karn Evil 9 (All Parts!) - Emerson Lake and Palmer | College Students' FIRST TIME REACTION!

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  • Опубликовано: 21 июл 2020
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Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @andyandalex
    @andyandalex  4 года назад +214

    Back finally with some more ELP!! You guys said we HAD to hit this prog EPIC, and we listened! Thank you all so much for suggesting the track!! What’s next?!?! 🙌🏻🔥

    • @digibirder
      @digibirder 4 года назад +46

      Thanks for the reaction guys! You passed the test. You are now officially in the "prog club". Try "Fanfare for the Common Man" next

    • @OldeDude15x
      @OldeDude15x 4 года назад +12

      I couldn't rate the whole thing either! If it was just First Impression Part 2, which is what got played on the radio, and can be found on RUclips, I'd go A+.

    • @alanhynd7886
      @alanhynd7886 4 года назад +22

      Did you guys just jump straight in at the deep end at swimming school? The earlier stuff is an easier gateway. 1st ELP album is winging its way to your PO box right now.

    • @denverkimberlin3275
      @denverkimberlin3275 4 года назад +10

      Please consider some Captain Beyond

    • @thewal1ofsleep
      @thewal1ofsleep 4 года назад +29

      Genesis - "The Cinema Show", "Dance on a Volcano", "The Carpet Crawlers", "Firth of Fifth", "Supper's Ready"...

  • @bigcanguy
    @bigcanguy 4 года назад +256

    To the naysayers, this is no less than Beethoven's 9th, performed by 3 guys. 3 guys who had much more primitive technology than exists today. Like it or not, this is sheer genius and musical artistry.

    • @oldeskoolnana7543
      @oldeskoolnana7543 3 года назад +3

      I love it. Listened to this with my boyfriend pretty much everyday & Zepplin.

    • @motleyh9427
      @motleyh9427 3 года назад +3

      Truth!

    • @stevenschoen1138
      @stevenschoen1138 3 года назад +5

      My brother got me into ELP and yes and several other band of the genre when I was about 15 (I was really into sabbath,KISS copper and the like) it took a few listens till I understood..fantastic fantastic musicians absolutely incredible

    • @carlosruiz-ob7le
      @carlosruiz-ob7le 3 года назад +3

      Coincido totalmente, pura genialidad y arte musical. Lamentablemente, no se ha vuelto a hacer esta clase de música tan inspirada y con tanto vuelo artístico desde los 70.

    • @voiceover2191
      @voiceover2191 3 года назад +4

      Actually they collaborated very closely with Robert Moog, who build the Moog Synthesizer, which became a standard in prog rock, and experimented with him to create new sounds.

  • @roykaplan
    @roykaplan 4 года назад +330

    Dudes! You don't get it!!! That grand piano sound??? That was a grand piano!! All those keyboard sounds? Those were all manually created by patching together different analog synth modules and turning knobs. He had multiple keyboards stacked on top of each other, not to look cool, but because each one was one specific sound, and he had to twist and jump between them playing different ones with each hand simultaneously. And he did it all live without overdubbing. He was one of the earliest synth pioneers and a mad keyboard genius. RIP Keith!

    • @michaelbochnia5686
      @michaelbochnia5686 4 года назад +19

      Shit, he stabbed his synth keyboard with a knife to jam it and then tossed it from side to side and flipped it to get certain wave length sounds. The live show was like watching phenoms like Hendrix burning his guitar or Townsend smashing it up. The tech. was pretty primitive compared to today.

    • @seed_drill7135
      @seed_drill7135 4 года назад +23

      @@michaelbochnia5686 I think that was his Hammond that he jabbed the knives into.

    • @michaelbochnia5686
      @michaelbochnia5686 4 года назад +1

      @@seed_drill7135 thank you.

    • @ericwincentsen587
      @ericwincentsen587 4 года назад +6

      @@seed_drill7135 Yes, he would do that when he was with the Nice. It was theatrical, but it also allowed him to play runs over the chords that the knives were holding down.

    • @rodjohnson2632
      @rodjohnson2632 4 года назад +7

      @Roy Kaplan Thanks, you said what I was trying to say about the amazing live performances, and all the things Emerson had to do to produce the sounds live. I saw them live in the 70's and will never forget how incredible it was.

  • @cpag1955
    @cpag1955 4 года назад +107

    “This guy’s a phenom”. Yes he was. And y’all listened to this perfectly. Headphones, eyes closed, head swaying. That’s how I did it back in the olden days.

  • @gerrymosby3414
    @gerrymosby3414 4 года назад +138

    I'm a 65 year old, semi-retired rock musician and am so thrilled that I found your channel. Your openness to appreciating great music from ages gone by is touching, truly. I watch all of your episodes. When I first heard this album, I was a teenaged, already a stone-gone ELP fanatic, mostly because of their album, Tarkus. OMFG, check it out if and when you have the time and inclination. But this album still makes me a bit emotional, because of its impact on the younger me. I saw ELP in Spokane, during their Brain Salad Surgery tour and was so spent at the end of the show, I cried, if I recall correctly. Karn Evil 9 was their final song of the night and it was truly unbelievable. My 2 buds and I snuck in to their afternoon setup and sound check and were allowed to stand near the FOH mix console, as all instruments were tested... before we were politely ushered out. Their sound system was revolutionary for the time: Quadraphonic ie 4 HUGE stacks of speakers in the corners of the arena, and when the synth sequence at the end of this song kicked in, it spun around the room faster and faster and even faster, ending when Keith Emerson's giant Moog synthesizer appeared to BLOW UP!!! Halcyon days!

    • @jimmcevers9443
      @jimmcevers9443 3 года назад +4

      Same in San Antonio! Folks who had partaken of a little weed prior to the concert walked around dazed for hours from that ending!! Been a fan since I discovered their first album while serving overseas in the late 60's - early 70's. Revisit this album often!!

    • @mellymom1121
      @mellymom1121 3 года назад +5

      @@jimmcevers9443 I remember Emerson playing the floating tumbling grand piano.

    • @ferrumequus88
      @ferrumequus88 3 года назад +10

      I am 70 now and have never stopped listening music of ELP. The 1970s was an age of great music. I shall die with big smile on my face knowing what great music has been done.

    • @mellymom1121
      @mellymom1121 3 года назад

      @@robertcarran9585 that's where I saw them! At The Garden!

    • @dougbowers1256
      @dougbowers1256 3 года назад +2

      I saw it in Manhattan, Kansas. Stunning show. 3 musicians.

  • @vinniejoe
    @vinniejoe 4 года назад +304

    Imagine being a 12 year old kid with his allowance in a record store and buying this record because he liked the picture? That was me in 1973. Changed my life.

    • @richg0404
      @richg0404 4 года назад +6

      I was a little older than that when I got this album in a trade with a friend. I think I traded The Beatles 1967-70 for this one. I knew absolutely nothing about ELP and the cover snagged me too. Loved it at first listen

    • @billfear1
      @billfear1 4 года назад +4

      Yes sir...that was me too...at aged 12! I spent many hours in HMV. Samplimg
      LPs in the listening booths until the manager told me to leave! ELP, Genesis and Pink Floyd changed my life.

    • @ricardoaraujo8741
      @ricardoaraujo8741 3 года назад +4

      I was 14. Speechless.

    • @mikeyw1702
      @mikeyw1702 3 года назад +3

      Hey I was also in that store ! I remember you vinniejoe - you grabbed the record just as I was about to buy it. I found another copy though :)

    • @ricardoaraujo8741
      @ricardoaraujo8741 3 года назад +1

      @mags jay Ever !

  • @strings53notlob50
    @strings53notlob50 4 года назад +66

    A thick and meaty bowl of prog stew that you ate too fast and suddenly realized you’re super full.

    • @Mime59100
      @Mime59100 4 года назад +4

      They were overly ready for their supper

  • @rmacbobco
    @rmacbobco 4 года назад +162

    They didn't call it Brain Salad Surgery for nothing.

    • @mk1317
      @mk1317 4 года назад +6

      Soooo true!......LOL

    • @veganm8918
      @veganm8918 3 года назад +4

      I think they assumed listeners would consume mood altering substances and turn the lights down and the music up really loud. Mind blown...

    • @kennethguilliams5207
      @kennethguilliams5207 3 года назад +1

      About the only thing in that era to compare this to would be ... Maybe Tommy by the who

    • @illusionclassicrock6742
      @illusionclassicrock6742 3 года назад +3

      @@veganm8918 The music itself was all a mood altering substance needed. Anything else would just take away from its brilliance.

    • @veganm8918
      @veganm8918 3 года назад +1

      ​@@illusionclassicrock6742 True. However they certainly were aware what some fans would partake in mood altering substances while listening to albums like Brain Salad Surgery. They probably did a bit of that themselves.

  • @petermay3861
    @petermay3861 4 года назад +111

    I'd almost forgotten how breathtaking Carl Palmers drumming was. There's more going on there than just keeping a beat.

    • @StephaneBergeronPixelyzed
      @StephaneBergeronPixelyzed 4 года назад +4

      Yep! And he played it even better live. The "Welcome Back My Friends..." album probably has the best version of this and Tarkus. And the drum solo in this live...

    • @europe7249
      @europe7249 3 года назад +5

      Before Neil Peart was the Professor, Carl Palmer had all the toys.

    • @voiceover2191
      @voiceover2191 3 года назад +3

      @@europe7249 Between Palmer and Billie Cobham, they were considered the best drummers of the world in that period.

    • @darkaether2798
      @darkaether2798 3 года назад +3

      Carl is a beast.

    • @Ofinfinitejest
      @Ofinfinitejest 3 года назад +3

      His work makes for a fascinating comparison with Neil Peart. Palmer is more classically oriented driving Keith's brilliant compositions, while Peart is more a critical component of the melodic signature of the music for Rush. Peart's a more musical drummer and Palmer was more immense speed and accenting every single note Keith played. The two best drummers in rock, but very different in what they did.

  • @manhattenman6075
    @manhattenman6075 4 года назад +100

    Keith Emerson is known as the Jimi Hendrix of the keyboard and piano, TARKUS IS INCREDIBLE

    • @jkhaf796
      @jkhaf796 4 года назад +8

      Tarkus is their best by far, has been performed by concert pianists, and entire orchestras

    • @larrymiller9698
      @larrymiller9698 4 года назад +2

      I believe he was trained at the London Conservatory of Music. Absolute master on the keyboard(s)

    • @abbymiller8441
      @abbymiller8441 4 года назад +4

      Tarkus is a must listen. Their best album

    • @danphilipp5395
      @danphilipp5395 3 года назад +1

      @@abbymiller8441 Check out "Three Fates Project" if you haven't already.

    • @rogerhurtubise2150
      @rogerhurtubise2150 3 года назад +3

      Funny you mention that, there was a few rumors that they invited Hendrix to join them, when ELP was first forming, but sadly he passed away before anything happened.

  • @jasonbroad5478
    @jasonbroad5478 4 года назад +105

    Sadly Keith Emerson and Greg Lake have passed, This band and music was accused of being "bombastic and over the top" but ELP showed us what was possible. They began the year the Beatles broke up....it is stunning what these 3 English boys accomplished. Thank you for listening and appreciating! They deserve it!!!

    • @1nelsondj
      @1nelsondj 4 года назад +7

      I think beginning musicians were just jealous of the degree of talent, it was daunting for someone who only knows 3 chords to listen to this.

    • @eileendobbs8574
      @eileendobbs8574 4 года назад +20

      Keith Emerson's suicide breaks my heart

    • @Raittway
      @Raittway 4 года назад +3

      @@eileendobbs8574 Oh my gosh! I didn't know that. So incredibly sad

    • @eileendobbs8574
      @eileendobbs8574 4 года назад +9

      @@Raittway yeah. He had been having muscle problems in his right arm and hands for years and was receiving criticism for his playing. I don't think he could accept the possibility that he might not be able to play anymore. Thats how important music is to these musicians and why I'm so happy young people like Andy & Alex are listening to them and enjoying their brilliance.

    • @joeday4293
      @joeday4293 4 года назад +4

      @@eileendobbs8574 So, so sad. Along with Chris Cornell and Stevie Ray Vaughan, my biggest musical regret - never got to see him live, especially before his nerve disorder crippled the greatest hands in rock keyboards.

  • @stevegardner9910
    @stevegardner9910 4 года назад +35

    Keith was and will forever be the greatest piano/keyboard/synth player in rock. Most rock keyboardists couldn't hold a candle to their jazz contemporaries, Emerson could sit in a jazz Trio in a small club and kill it. Couple that with his composing skills, his pioneering use of the synth - which was a new thing back then - and there's no doubt that he's #1. It's truly a tragedy that he is no longer with us.

    • @smithmann5616
      @smithmann5616 4 года назад +2

      Indeed.

    • @ThatsMrPencilneck2U
      @ThatsMrPencilneck2U 11 месяцев назад +2

      Of course, the pompous Jazz aficionados would still labeled him as "presumptuous." There was a time when you just had to throw rotten vegetables at anybody who claimed to listen to Jazz, because they would tell you whatever you listened to was "crap."

    • @delby66
      @delby66 10 месяцев назад

      I totally agree with you, but I did love Tony Banks, Rick Wakeman and I have to mention this man because he doesn't get the recognition that I think he deserves, that's Michael Pinder of Moody Blues fame.

    • @sledge57a
      @sledge57a 3 месяца назад +1

      For me Keith’s keyboards were the quintessential ELP sound. When you heard him you knew what band it was, so good…

  • @michaeldenham5880
    @michaeldenham5880 3 года назад +37

    You’ve stumbled into the Master Class of Prog Rock. Three individuals players, keyboards, bass and drums. That’s all there is. This is what they created. What a gift.

  • @stephenlf706
    @stephenlf706 4 года назад +140

    Tarkus. It's a little song about a mutant armadillo who has been crossed with a tank. Tarkus encounters many foes and defeats them until the battle with the manticore. He loses the battle but morphs into Aquatarkus. That alone should be enough to pique your curiosity.

    • @robulven3019
      @robulven3019 4 года назад +9

      Best summary I've ever heard! 🤣🤣

    • @DGF042
      @DGF042 4 года назад

      @@robulven3019 you're right :D

    • @UrinationNation
      @UrinationNation 3 года назад

      Tarkus is definitely my BAE

    • @Vince-lq3ve
      @Vince-lq3ve 3 года назад +3

      peaked my interest and I've heard the song 18 times already.

    • @ZENmud
      @ZENmud 3 года назад +3

      Comments: me
      RUclips search: "Tarkus Live" 😉

  • @meistergedanken4790
    @meistergedanken4790 4 года назад +75

    I love how you guys look dumbstruck and exhausted - halfway through, LOL.

    • @BBobb12
      @BBobb12 4 года назад +4

      i agree, seeing your faces after the first 15 mins. i knew you two were in trouble. try listening to this stoned out of your head. i can't really say i lasted thru the whole album ( or i don't remember)........

    • @operating
      @operating 4 года назад +2

      Think of playing it live!

  • @williamscoggin1509
    @williamscoggin1509 9 месяцев назад +8

    I saw Emerson Lake and Palmer perform this live in 1977. Simply amazing that three people can make this much sound on stage live. It was jaw-dropping! 😀

  • @alexw5085
    @alexw5085 10 месяцев назад +16

    I never tire of hearing this. RIP Keith and Greg. Never equaled let alone bettered. All 3 in a class of their own.

    • @Frank-pb2rh
      @Frank-pb2rh 4 месяца назад +1

      Agreed,makes me stronger just hearing their genius and Carl what a monster ,I'd challenge anyone to match any of them in any genre!!!

  • @ralphus555
    @ralphus555 4 года назад +59

    Greg Lake's guitar work on this song is so underrated... My favorite singer of all time.

    • @jwsIII
      @jwsIII 3 года назад +1

      Likewise

    • @wentkat
      @wentkat 3 года назад +3

      His guitar work AND the bass line, especially at the beginning in 1st Impression, Part 1.

    • @chazm3
      @chazm3 3 года назад +2

      To be able to hold the stage up against the greatest keyboard player of all time is quite an accomplishment and Greg Lake did it - - - on bass and vocals and electric guitar and especially on his superb acoustic guitar work.

  • @victormendez8811
    @victormendez8811 3 года назад +99

    Karn Evil 9 is the summit of the progressive rock genre. Nothing comes close, no piece of music in this genre is deeper. Keith Emerson, Greg Lake, and Carl Palmer created a masterpiece that they couldn't even beat.

    • @RiverEdger
      @RiverEdger 3 года назад +6

      Tales from Topographic Oceans... "hold my beer"

    • @alchemy920
      @alchemy920 2 года назад +1

      @@RiverEdger Great response, but totally different feel on music. Both are the pinnacle on what they are trying to achieve.

    • @matteopacelli9001
      @matteopacelli9001 2 года назад +1

      There are many great progressive rock musicians. The “best” is completely subjective as it depends on what you are looking for

    • @marcusanthonyPOV
      @marcusanthonyPOV Год назад

      @@matteopacelli9001 I'm pretty sure if you asked a computer, Karn Evil 9 would take the cake.

    • @FormulaProg
      @FormulaProg Год назад

      Tarkus is better though.... So... Yeah.

  • @rodjohnson2632
    @rodjohnson2632 4 года назад +15

    I was lucky enough to see ELP live in the 70's. It was amazing to see how they could play their material live and be as good as in the studio. Keith Emerson never really sat down during a show, he had to move around so much from one keyboard to another, and was constantly flipping switches and turning knobs all over the place to produce the needed sounds. Incredible to see and hear. And they had this crazy gimmick where Emerson would strap himself in, and he and his entire piano and keyboards and all would go spinning upside down and all around as he played!

  • @bws1971
    @bws1971 4 года назад +64

    LOL, you Guys were so blindsided, that you didn't even rate the song. Honestly, I don't blame you. I mean, can it even be described as a mere song? This is an epic journey. It is off the charts, and to characterize it as a song is to cheapen its significance. I get it. For that alone, however, it deserves an S Tier rating. Prove me wrong

  • @patrickmcevoy5080
    @patrickmcevoy5080 4 года назад +120

    Something they did which is SUPER clever on vinyl is the 2nd part of 1st Impression where they say "Welcome back my friends to the show that never ends" is that you've just turned the record over to side two there. And they welcome you back. One of the best touches ever from the age of vinyl records.

    • @DrNothing23
      @DrNothing23 4 года назад +7

      Not to mention the "...and shocks..." editing brilliance!

    • @jeff2908
      @jeff2908 4 года назад +10

      Tom Petty did a tongue-in-cheek bit on the Full Moon Fever CD about flipping records. After "Running Down a Dream" he says: “Hello, CD listeners. We’ve come to the point in this album where those listening on cassette or record will have to stand up - or sit down - and turn over the record - or tape. In fairness to those listeners, we’ll now take a few seconds before we begin side two. Thank you. Here is side two.”

    • @submandave1125
      @submandave1125 4 года назад +12

      How the tracks of an album were laid out often had intent and purpose that is lost in the CD/digital age.

    • @perrymac
      @perrymac 4 года назад +3

      Yes, I had forgotten that.

    • @crazyfingers19
      @crazyfingers19 4 года назад +3

      I had totally forgotten about that! Thanks for jarring a memory loose

  • @pleasantvalleypickerca7681
    @pleasantvalleypickerca7681 4 года назад +33

    With "Karn Evil 9" it's like a musical marathon. Keith Emerson's playing is phenomenal. I was worried Andy and Alex would pass out! Welcome to music made for serious music fans guys.

  • @psbarrow
    @psbarrow 4 года назад +54

    This left us speechless in 1973; even in 2020 it has the same effect as it's too "out there" to immediately give a rating to.

    • @socalltd
      @socalltd 3 года назад +1

      Someone told me that, thats how everyone felt when the show ended in '74 when they toured for BSS. Speechless and in a daze..

    • @oldeskoolnana7543
      @oldeskoolnana7543 3 года назад +1

      ELP & YES we're amazing live. This brings back great memories. ELP is so underrated.😍😍

    • @simonjones8111
      @simonjones8111 3 года назад +2

      Indeed, but some of us had King Crimson and The Nice to prepare us!

  • @bfernuttz3737
    @bfernuttz3737 4 года назад +33

    As a keyboard player coming up in the 70’s, there was Keith Emerson, Rick Wakeman...and the rest! They were like gods to us mere mortals. This is a masterpiece. Big props for tackling the whole thing.

    • @jimihendrix991
      @jimihendrix991 Год назад +1

      ...you forgot Rick Wright, Jon Lord, Tony Banks... 😉

    • @bfernuttz3737
      @bfernuttz3737 Год назад +1

      @@jimihendrix991 Great players, but Rick and Keith were on another planet, IMO

    • @waterdonkey
      @waterdonkey Год назад

      Same here. Wakeman's No Earthy Connections is a masterpiece.

  • @bennyman1622
    @bennyman1622 4 года назад +25

    Listening to this song for the first time is akin to never having tasted pie, and then entering a pie eating contest......and winning!

  • @zangolli1963
    @zangolli1963 4 года назад +95

    Greg Lake has one of the best voices in Rock hands down.

    • @Military450Veteran
      @Military450Veteran 4 года назад +1

      👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎

    • @rebeccahernandez3460
      @rebeccahernandez3460 4 года назад +5

      I totally agree! His vocal is beautiful and had such range when he was young! He's my all time favorite singer and musician. And he was so under rated as a electric guitar player, but when he's playing it on this song, he set that guitar on fire! I wish he'd played more electric guitar!

    • @johnclauss5501
      @johnclauss5501 3 года назад +6

      May he Rest in Peace.

    • @RSimoes10
      @RSimoes10 10 месяцев назад +1

      His bass playing was amazing too, and his guitar solo on First Impression is one of the best I've ever heard.

  • @donaldanderson6604
    @donaldanderson6604 4 года назад +33

    My mum bought me this album for Christmas 73. A couple of days later I got Topographic Oceans with my pocket money. Those were the days.

    • @musicartguy1
      @musicartguy1 Год назад

      Think that every classic prog epic come out in a span of about 6 years (court of the crimson king to relayer).

  • @drkmriggs
    @drkmriggs 4 года назад +43

    ‘Man of steel pray and kneel with fever’s blazing torch, thrust into the face of the night / draws a blade of compassion kissed by countless kings / whose jeweled trumpet words blind his sight”...seriously can you imagine any artist today with something remotely like this kind of lyrical creativity?

    • @hpalpha7323
      @hpalpha7323 3 года назад

      Poetry

    • @bobk3840
      @bobk3840 3 года назад +3

      Today’s artists, except for a very very very small percentage suck.

    • @simonjones8111
      @simonjones8111 3 года назад +5

      That’s Pete Sinfield for you. Go to King Crimson, Court of the Crimson King, Epitaph, for us ultimate!👌👌

    • @simonjones8111
      @simonjones8111 3 года назад

      I meant “his” not “us”!

  • @thatoneguyagain2252
    @thatoneguyagain2252 4 года назад +48

    You had absolutely no way to anticipate what you were about to hear, and honestly, I can't imagine what any of us could've said to prepare you. Gentlemen, it was a pure pleasure to watch you leap into this particular rabbit hole. Your bravery will be rewarded.

    • @voiceover2191
      @voiceover2191 3 года назад +1

      Indeed, great to see a couple of young man not afraid to have this kind of musical adventure.

    • @Belit01
      @Belit01 3 года назад

      "Huevos Grandes" 8s what it took to leap into this one, thank you for doing so! Should have the time to watch any of their live concerts from the early - mid 70's, please do so. These guys put on a first class show that everyone dancing in their seats. 🎶😁👍

    • @waynemarvin5661
      @waynemarvin5661 Год назад

      Who knows? Maybe ELP will open the door to Ellington, Miller, and Goodman!

  • @EdwardVodika
    @EdwardVodika 4 года назад +51

    Carl Palmer one of the greatest percussionist ever

    • @gatorguyblue
      @gatorguyblue 4 года назад

      i saw Carl Palmer performing when he was in Asia....killer show!

    • @jasonbroad5478
      @jasonbroad5478 4 года назад +2

      I know A & A love Neil Peart but I think Carl was every bit as good as Neil.

  • @johnclauss5501
    @johnclauss5501 3 года назад +10

    You really needed to see them do this live to appreciate the incredible musicianship of all three members. I was lucky enough to see them several times. Always amazing.

  • @jayharris9895
    @jayharris9895 4 года назад +10

    Today I got to watch two college students zone out, have their minds blown and run a mental marathon. Its a good time to be alive when the music of my youth reaches the next generation. Kudos guys. Be sure to pass this on to your future young ones and give my love to the future of humankind.

  • @denverkimberlin3275
    @denverkimberlin3275 4 года назад +149

    This is ELP's most popular song from their most popular album. The song is most commonly interpreted as ELP's take on a shortened history of the world into a futuristic tale. The First Impression begins on the "Cold and misty morning" of the Earth's birth, through the ice age ("Where the seeds have withered, silent faces in the cold"), and to man's growing lust for money ("Now their faces captured in the lenses of the jackals for gold"), which leads to various wars. Afterwards, the world is described as a carnival, wherein various elements of humanity are reduced to circus sideshows ("A bomb inside a car," "Pull Jesus from a hat"), representing the human race's growing selfishness and indifference toward others. Even human misery is described as a "specialty" in the "show."
    The second part of the First Impression focuses on the growing artificialization of the world, describing something as natural as "A real blade of grass" as some bizarre circus attraction. Despite the fact that the world is becoming more and more consumed by artificiality and given control to computers (see Third Impression), the human race insists that it is still in control, as it created all that the "Carnival" encompasses ("We would like it to be known the exhibits that were shown were exclusively our own.").
    The Second Impression is an instrumental piece (mostly a piano solo), symbolizing the blissful ignorance of humanity towards the impending danger of the conquest of the computers, which culminates in the Third Impression. At this point, the "machines" have concluded their superiority to humanity and begin to take on mankind's necessity to prove their own superiority. The computers are represented by heavily distorted vocals, while the voice of the all-representative "Man" is clean and without effect. The computers finally wage a violent conquest of the Earth. Mankind is shocked that its own creation is fighting back against him ("Walls that no man thought would fall") and is unprepared for the conflict. Finally the machines determine that they are sentient beings and the new "Humans," or rather the new dominant species ("Load your program. I am yourself."), pushing humanity to the subservient status that they had once occupied. After their victory ("Rejoice! Glory is ours!"), they make sure not to wipe out the human race, but preserve it to demean humanity and gloat about their superiority.
    The last stanza of the suite epitomizes the conquest and the arrogance of both the old and new masters of the earth, wherein man struggles to maintain his presence as the dominant species on Earth and the computers assert that they have surpassed their creators: "I am all there is." "Negative! Primitive! Limited! I let you live!" "But I gave you life!" "What else could you do?" "To do what is right." "I'm perfect! Are you?"

    • @artboyee
      @artboyee 4 года назад +19

      We are currently in circus mode

    • @Lightmane
      @Lightmane 4 года назад +6

      @@artboyee the really messed up circus where the clowns are all evil and everyone is screaming and running for their lives

    • @johnfoster5295
      @johnfoster5295 4 года назад +10

      Wow, great explanation. I never bothered to break it down like that, I just dig the song. Now I feel like I need to listen to it again.

    • @MattKrogmeier
      @MattKrogmeier 4 года назад +10

      That is masterfully described! Well done!

    • @wpollock1
      @wpollock1 4 года назад +11

      You nailed it. Excellent analysis!

  • @beds139
    @beds139 4 года назад +45

    ELP gained a reputation for pompous,self-indulgent prog rock. And I enjoyed every second of it!

    • @vanamonde2
      @vanamonde2 4 года назад +2

      Amen brutha!!!

    • @steverickenbacher7110
      @steverickenbacher7110 4 года назад

      Sure. When you're 12. You want music that will last a lifetime? Go to Lake's original band.

    • @vanamonde2
      @vanamonde2 4 года назад +3

      @@steverickenbacher7110 yeah. There's nothing self indulgent about king crimson.... wow

    • @steverickenbacher7110
      @steverickenbacher7110 4 года назад

      Don't be a big doink! KC is good self-indulgence, are the most important and influential of the top tier pwog bands and have always had drummers that could keep steady time. These kids looked like they were falling asleep for much of this. That's called "bad self-indulgence". Lake's dream was to reform the original KC - the best band he was ever a part of. In his autobiography, he expressed frustration with Palmer's inability to keep time, and even mentioned that the best drummer he ever played with was Sheila E. So, sit down and smarten up.

  • @michaeltibus1238
    @michaeltibus1238 4 года назад +37

    ELP = G.E.N.I.U.S. And the voice of Greg Lake is the most underrated of all time!

  • @NortholtJohn3
    @NortholtJohn3 4 года назад +31

    ELP didn’t just write songs, they wrote compositions that addressed man’s inhumanity to man and drew on their classical and jazz background to project their ideas, back then they were the ultimate progressive rock outfit with a unique sound that left the listener in no doubt about their message, by the age of the punk and new wave generation of course they were considered dinosaurs, but in their time they were giants of the genre.

  • @piscator57
    @piscator57 4 года назад +32

    RIP Keith Emerson, Greg Lake.

  • @alanhynd7886
    @alanhynd7886 4 года назад +32

    RIP Keith Emerson and Greg Lake

  • @waterdonkey
    @waterdonkey Год назад +8

    My favorite band Steely Dan created their timeless masterpieces using the world's top musicians. My second favorite band ELP did it all on their own.

  • @Tonyblack261
    @Tonyblack261 4 года назад +22

    Their version of Mussorgsky's Pictures At an Exhibition, got me into Classical Music.

  • @ronaldcardinali2809
    @ronaldcardinali2809 4 года назад +106

    Guys try these songs from ELP , " Fanfare for the common man" , and " Lucky man"

    • @milasthompson82
      @milasthompson82 4 года назад +5

      Love Fanfare. Did you know they used to use the ELP version of that tune as the theme for Wide World of Sports?

    • @godbluffvdgg
      @godbluffvdgg 4 года назад +1

      Yuk...bro; of all the great ELP songs; Those two? They've been played to death...You must not know ANYTHING about ELP...Literally every single song is more important and profound than those and ONE OF THEM IS ACTUALLY AN AARON COPELAND composition...

    • @Wilburnator
      @Wilburnator 4 года назад

      @@milasthompson82 This is not true. Nowhere in the theme for Wide World of Sports is there any part of "Fanfare for the Common Man"

    • @steveg5933
      @steveg5933 4 года назад +5

      Besides, neither Alex nor Andy were alive when Wide World of Sports went off the air. That being said, played to death or not, we may have heard them ad nauseum, but, they haven't heard them.
      This is about them reacting to songs they haven't heard. Let them decide

    • @donaldpruitt6787
      @donaldpruitt6787 4 года назад +5

      And do trilogy , endless enigma from trilogy and tarkus. , works (pirates )

  • @lobster4501
    @lobster4501 4 года назад +30

    I’m 61 years old. I’ve been playing music for over 40 years.
    I have had 27of my songs played on the radio. I love music and creating music.
    But what I want to say is... I have a 1974 SH 1000 Roland synthesizer... i’ve been playing this since 1980. I want to convey how awesome it is to make these sounds! Analog synthesizers are amazing.
    I have made every sound that you just heard in your headphones..Rick Wakeman said one time ..that “ Ya guitars are loud but as soon as I play my Synthesizer I cut right through everything I cut through the mix because nothing beats a square wave”...Anyway I love Synth sounds I am doing it for 40 years great song choice take care of young men
    Ps: I’m drinking LOL just like you

  • @276parpir
    @276parpir 4 года назад +20

    This is astonishing!!! I am 62 and never heard it until now--arguably the greatest Prog Rock song ever!!!!!! And that assessment comes with only one listening!!!

    • @williamscoggin1509
      @williamscoggin1509 9 месяцев назад

      Better late than never. 👍🏻

    • @paullakowski2509
      @paullakowski2509 8 месяцев назад

      I have to wonder what rock were you under?????@@williamscoggin1509
      But to be fair all i listened to was prog rock from 1970s. I was lucky enough to have brothers or I would have missed RUSH

    • @nikolajkrarup-os9gn
      @nikolajkrarup-os9gn 2 месяца назад

      Have you been living under a rock?

  • @jcroston3266
    @jcroston3266 4 года назад +22

    “Overstimulated” is the perfect comment. This song is like a long swirling movie, you need to sit back and relax and just listen and go where it goes. It’s absolutely a masterpiece. ELP was hated by the critics and loved by music fans. Keith Emerson was so amazingly better than everyone else, he made Carl Palmer and Greg Lake, both great musicians, almost an afterthought.

    • @grandfajaarmani3470
      @grandfajaarmani3470 4 года назад +4

      I was just thinking about how pissed I'd get reading dismissive reviews of their work. I had locked in for so many years into the live versions that I hadn't listened to the studio version on BSS in quite some time. I forgot some of the brilliant nuances.

    • @ronsterm7076
      @ronsterm7076 3 года назад

      @J Croston then as now...fuck the critics.

  • @murraywestenskow2896
    @murraywestenskow2896 4 года назад +33

    Here's an interest story about ELP's song - *Lucky Man* - The band needed one more song to fill out their debut album. They asked each other if they had some old songs just lying around. Greg Lake said he had a song - but he wrote it when he was 12 years old. The group said play it - he did - they modified it to their sound, and it made the album. Not only did it make the album - it became one of their most popular songs - and part of their legend. *Lucky Man* was written by a 12 year old kid in 1959 - go figure.

    • @barryedwards1336
      @barryedwards1336 4 года назад +6

      On one of Greg’s interviews he mentioned that on hearing Greg's original version both Carl and Keith did not like it much, so much so Keith decided to go off to the pub for a drink, Carl and Greg stayed behind and added various instruments into the song to make it sound better, when Keith returned and heard the changes they made he said I suppose I'd better do something too, I’ve just got a new instrument it's called a Moog Synthesizer, it's set up in the next studio, maybe I can use that, so he went to try out the Moog, unfortunately Keith did not know there were no spare tracks left that he could use on the original take, all that could be done was to add onto the end of the last track recorded, their sound engineer Eddy took Keith’s Moog tinkering and tagged it onto the end of the last track and that's how the Moog solo came to be, and the new Lucky Man was born, Greg had to drag Keith into the album studio (as he (Keith) was not happy with his efforts) Greg and Carl both wanted Keith to hear the difference it made, they thought it sounded so good and was just what Lucky Man needed.

    • @rmn3186
      @rmn3186 3 года назад

      @@barryedwards1336 Actually Knife Edge was the filler as he states in an early Melody Maker article & if you have the Pictures at an Exhibition special edition that includes the filmed Live at the Lyceum in London in December 1970 & Mar y Sol concert, Greg says it at the end of The Barbarian just before they play Knife Edge. But it's ELP history now that Lucky Man was the filler because Greg remembered it that way later in life. It's makes for better ELP lore since Lucky Man was a hit. :)

  • @charlestwisted9890
    @charlestwisted9890 4 года назад +23

    “Purple...maybe...
    72 degrees...
    I don’t know!
    Corn?
    I don’t know...”
    I haven’t laughed that hard in a while, thank you.
    Honest, and hilarious.
    Perfect.

  • @laxdog02
    @laxdog02 4 года назад +22

    Third album track, "Still...you turn me on" is a great contemporary song that I'm sure you'll both enjoy. Also, from the ELP (dove) album..."Take a pebble" and "Lucky Man". The title song of the Trilogy album is exceptional. Knife Edge from the album Pictures at an exhibition (live)...very raw 50 year old performance and the following song Rondo really jams. An awesome, very unappreciated band...

  • @DonFormica
    @DonFormica 4 года назад +98

    " sounds like an old detective movie" check out ELP "Peter Gunn"
    Nobody else will suggest this but ELP's live album "Mussorgsky's: Pictures at an exhibition" is truly a masterpiece!

    • @garyarnett1220
      @garyarnett1220 4 года назад +2

      absolutely

    • @crimson777king
      @crimson777king 4 года назад +9

      "were going to bring you Pictures at an exhibition"! Applause following and rapturous appreciation from the audience that composed of many music students and tutors.

    • @philstyles5571
      @philstyles5571 4 года назад +1

      Absof***inglutely!!

    • @matto9734
      @matto9734 3 года назад +2

      sooo true

    • @Insanalyst
      @Insanalyst 3 года назад +1

      One of my favorites.

  • @mihohobaba
    @mihohobaba 4 года назад +22

    You've got to watch ELP perform this live at the California Jam 1974 - epic performance.

  • @unklscrufy
    @unklscrufy 4 года назад +30

    One of my favorite reactions from you two. Today's my birthday, so I'll consider it a birthday present because I'm weird. It's been a while since I listened to the whole thing, but holy shit. It never gets old. Glad you guys gave it a go. Rock on. 🤘😎🍺

    • @joannasunday
      @joannasunday 4 года назад +3

      Happy birthday!

    • @andyandalex
      @andyandalex  4 года назад +4

      @unklscrufy
      Happy Birthday man!!! ❤️🔥

    • @planetlg
      @planetlg 4 года назад +1

      Happy Birthday, ELP fan!

    • @kathygreager2761
      @kathygreager2761 4 года назад +1

      Happy Birthday!

    • @Pjaypt
      @Pjaypt 4 года назад +1

      Happy Birthday (better late than never 🙂)

  • @bobshookman6050
    @bobshookman6050 4 года назад +13

    The next Emerson Lake and Palmer song should be the magically hauntingly melodic C’est La Vie. This will showcase their true range from Karn Evil to this hypnotic song

  • @queefreak666
    @queefreak666 4 года назад +3

    The date was April 5th, 1974, the day before the California Jam concert festival where ELP was a co-headliner. I was a 16yr old goofball working in a motorcycle accessories shop in West Los Angeles. Who would've ever imagined that at that random moment, Keith Emerson would stroll in to do a little shopping for one of his bikes. I gave Keith a grand tour of the store and sold him about $350 in various parts and wished him a great show. He was total gentleman with a great spirit.
    Side note: While Keith was browsing, I told my weirdo boss Harry that he was one of the most famous keyboard players alive and then Harry proceeded to try and sell Keith a piano he was trying to get rid of.

  • @MezThorbonizer
    @MezThorbonizer 4 года назад +37

    Just a little detail.. When the lyric "Welcome back my friends, to the show that never ends..." plays, that is the beginning of side 2 of the album. As if he was welcoming you back to the music after you'd had to stop and flip the LP. Also, the album art that they used for the album jacket is from the same artist that designed the Xenomorph for the movie Alien, H. R. Giger.. If you can ever find the physical LP jacket, take a look. It opens up to show the rest of the lady's face and a lot more. It also originally came with a wall poster. That's one thing I miss about LP releases, the great artwork and extras. Cheers!

    • @lemming9984
      @lemming9984 4 года назад +1

      Also the Phallus on the front cover - in front of the girl was airbrushed out for US market!

    • @kahlegregory9447
      @kahlegregory9447 4 года назад +1

      this LP lives on my living room wall as art, next to Wish You Were Here and Bob Dylan Self Portrait

    • @MarkSemsel
      @MarkSemsel 3 года назад +1

      I would love to have seen the wall poster!

  • @jamesdignanmusic2765
    @jamesdignanmusic2765 4 года назад +20

    All three musicians were pure virtuosos at their instruments. Emerson's keyboards and Palmers drumming are obvious, but listen to what Greg Lake was doing bass behind that keyboard break at the 15.15 minute mark (on the video - about 13.30 minutes in to the track). The white-water rafting analogy is a good one. You just gotta hold on for the ride. As you probably know it was Lake also on the vocals - and he was also the vocalist on early King Crimson (who you've done a lot of on your patreon videos) - 21st Century Schizoid Man, etc.

  • @willih007
    @willih007 4 года назад +29

    oh shit, I forgot how many parts there were to this. Karn Evil 9 - 1st Impression - Part 2 is a beast!!! If you want to give them another try, I'd recommend "Knife Edge"

    • @smithmann5616
      @smithmann5616 4 года назад +3

      Knife Edge they could handle and would still give them a taste of the sound.

  • @racerx3654
    @racerx3654 4 года назад +16

    I was in the 4th grade when this album came out. I was playing with my best friend at his house when his older brother came home and told us you guys have to come listen to this new ELP record. We went to his room and listened to the entire thing (like you guys are now). Unbelievable, Amazing, etc. definately shaped my lifes musical journey. Watching you two react to this puts me right back in that room soo long ago. Thanx for triggering that memory. As a lifelong ELP fan I would recommend side 1 of Tarkus. My personal favorite.

  • @terryp3034
    @terryp3034 4 года назад +14

    "welcome to the show", guys. Perhaps most amazing is that ELP played this stuff live exactly as you heard it on the recording. They were like a runaway bullet train. One of a kind.

  • @snuppssynthchannel
    @snuppssynthchannel 3 года назад +5

    There is a reason to why Emerson was considered the ultimate keyboard player of his day. He was the full package, a brilliant composer, arranger, performer, synthesist and pioneer. He was to Rock and prog keyboards what Jimi Hendrix is to the Electric guitar and was likely among the top five musicians of the prog movement. ELP was a milestone in the seventies music scene!

  • @vesosobot4094
    @vesosobot4094 3 года назад +7

    Keith, Greg and Carl were musical geniuses - what a contribution to humanity!

  • @OldeDude15x
    @OldeDude15x 4 года назад +32

    Listening to all of Karn Evil 9 is pretty close to sensory overload. First Impression Part 2 was what most listen to, and so much easier to digest.

    • @adamp2029
      @adamp2029 4 года назад +2

      OldeDude15x I was never a fan of theirs, but I had always assumed that Karen Evil 9 was just the part I used to hear on the radio. I never realized that was just part of an epic.

    • @johnparker3111
      @johnparker3111 4 года назад +3

      Go listen to Rachel Flowers' piano only version of this song. She and Keith became friends after she got well known on the internet for killing the keyboard parts. Rachel is blind and I think her outlet was piano. She master many of their songs. Keith Emerson introduced the video where she was the first to try his rebuilt Moog from the early years. She and Rick Wakeman are the main two keyboardists in the tribute concert after Keith passed. She also played lead guitar with Zappa plays Zappa and had an online teaching video about how to play a Jaco Pastorius song. Oh, yeah, she also has a couple of discs of originals out. What would make you think I'm a fan? Start with Karn Evil 9 Second Impression...

  • @telynns8490
    @telynns8490 4 года назад +18

    Emerson is always in the conversation when talking about who was the best rock keyboard player.

    • @grandfajaarmani3470
      @grandfajaarmani3470 4 года назад +1

      Nothing to debate. He was the goat.

    • @mk1317
      @mk1317 4 года назад

      Always concedered him amoung the holy trinity of rock keyboard gods along with Jon Lord and Rick Wakeman

  • @garywebster3585
    @garywebster3585 4 года назад +33

    Check Rachel Flowers playing parts of this glorious piece and tarkus. She is the legacy.

    • @minty_Joe
      @minty_Joe 4 года назад +1

      Oh Hell Yeah!!! She is mind blowing elite!!!

    • @wpollock1
      @wpollock1 3 года назад +1

      Fantastic in that Emerson Tribute

    • @snuppssynthchannel
      @snuppssynthchannel 3 года назад

      She is incredible and yet she is only a small part of this bands vast legacy. Emerson is the most influential electric keyboardplayer ever!

    • @ajaxfernsby4078
      @ajaxfernsby4078 3 года назад +1

      Gary Webster, because of this post I did a search of Rachel Flowers. Now I’m a total fan, as I was of ELP in my teens. Her obvious Love of Keith and ELP brings a tear to my eye. The legend lives on. Thanks.

    • @nikolajkrarup-os9gn
      @nikolajkrarup-os9gn 2 месяца назад

      She is amazing. The best to carry the legacy of ELP

  • @BilliamBillion
    @BilliamBillion 4 года назад +11

    Carl Palmer is in the process of turning Karn Evil 9 into a movie.

    • @jumphawk8836
      @jumphawk8836 3 года назад +1

      Pog

    • @hpalpha7323
      @hpalpha7323 3 года назад +2

      Really?? That would be amazing

    • @BilliamBillion
      @BilliamBillion 3 года назад +2

      @@hpalpha7323 there's a Rolling Stone article about it from early this year, I figure that's a reputable enough source

    • @StoryeTime
      @StoryeTime 3 года назад +1

      As it was intended, they were commissioned to compose a soundtrack for a movie which never happened so they kept their work and recorded as their own album instead, turned down by Atlantic in the US, made it big everywhere else so Atlantic then begged them to sign with them for the American market and the rest is history

  • @alexjbennett1017
    @alexjbennett1017 4 года назад +16

    A&A, I practically wet my pants when I saw you hit the WHOLE THING. You have WAY MORE than paid back my (hopefully gentle) negative comments in the past. I have to get my work done for the day (in Cali) before I can watch/listen, so back later... hope you guys enjoyed listening and reacting to this (imho) absolute pinnacle of prog rock bravura...

  • @Drummingvulture
    @Drummingvulture 4 года назад +13

    Like I said, ELP is big. They're bombastic. And after they throw the kitchen sink at you, they tear the pipes out of the wall and throw those at you as well.

  • @christopherwoods6777
    @christopherwoods6777 3 года назад +8

    I heard parts of this in college back in the 80s, but never the whole thing. This is amazing. I was agreeing with you guys. It's not music, it's its own universe.

  • @StephaneBergeronPixelyzed
    @StephaneBergeronPixelyzed 4 года назад +42

    Andy: "How can we hit the human mind from every single angle!"
    Me: hold my beer! Play Tocatta (same album)

    • @lawrence1389u
      @lawrence1389u 3 года назад +4

      hahaha.... yes, please play Tocatta. I'm giving 2 to 1 odds that your heads actually explode listening to that. LOL!

    • @socalltd
      @socalltd 3 года назад

      any live version of Tocatta is better. .

    • @voiceover2191
      @voiceover2191 3 года назад +1

      @@lawrence1389u The original composer Ginastera actually liked it!

    • @jgdmlw
      @jgdmlw 3 года назад +2

      I would suggest listening to the studio version of toccata and then listen to the live version from welcome back and it is absolutely stunning.

  • @tsw5746
    @tsw5746 4 года назад +28

    Brave of you to take this incredible suite on - I've been listening to ELP since 1970, saw them in 72, 74, 92 and their last show in 2010. (yes, I'm old!). My favourite band, and KE9 is perhaps their crowning glory - and the version on Welcome Back... is even better - they could play all this live., and even found room to improvise amid all the sound and fury. They were fantastic, and how they're not in the so-called Rock And Roll Hall of Fame is a scandal. Emerson was the greatest keyboard player in rock, Lake one of the finest singers (not forgetting his superb abilities on bass and guitar) and Palmer remains one of the world's best drummers even today. Suggest you give Tarkus a shot next - preferably the live version - it's only 27.5 minutes long... ;)

    • @oldeskoolnana7543
      @oldeskoolnana7543 3 года назад

      We aren't old. I'm 62 & a grandmother. Listening to all of our generations music I'm 18 again. Can't remember what I did yesterday but remember every word of this. One of my faves.Rock on. ✌

    • @gaylasmith5279
      @gaylasmith5279 3 года назад

      ELP AREN'T IN THE ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME? WHAT A TRAVESTY!

    • @gaylasmith5279
      @gaylasmith5279 3 года назад

      @@oldeskoolnana7543 I'm a year your elder. In my mind, I'm 25. When I rarely look in a mirror, I've no idea who is looking back. But, hey, we had the best bands and music growing up didn't we? Peace.

  • @recyclerhopkins
    @recyclerhopkins 4 года назад +21

    Guys, to put this in terms from the time period (1973) Thought the reaction would never start but finally the bell rang all hell broke loose. Give you guys credit for getting in the ring with a hard puncher like a Joe Frazier type. Probably weren't ready for this type of onslaught. You have been taking on some tomato cans recently. Andy was on the ropes early and after awhile was hanging on for dear life, hoping to survive and make it to the 15th round. Alex on the other hand looked ready to throw in the towel when he swung his mic out but decided to hang in there. Definitely a lot of body punches were absorbed by you both but you were able to stay relatively ( for you guys ) lucid and you were saved by the bell. Alex took a standing 8 count but continued. Andy that's gonna hurt in the morning. Had you behind on my card. Only call them as I see them. Lyrics deal with the post apocalypse, but who cares after a beating like this, at least you got their license number.

  • @MrCuriocat
    @MrCuriocat 3 года назад +4

    Got a brother who is 16 years older than me. I was born in 1974, so from the moment I came home I heard this album constantly. I still have memories of when I was 2-3, sitting on the floor, looking at the album artwork and being absolutely fascinated. He had all the 70's rock classics. Thanks, bro!!!!

  • @operating
    @operating 4 года назад +8

    Of all the prog albums I’ve ever listened to, this is THE one that I can listen to repeatedly to this day without tiring because there’s so much to offer. Yes it’s a lot of info but with that comes something you can appreciate again and again through many years. Seeing this live must’ve been insane.

    • @waterdonkey
      @waterdonkey Год назад

      True. That was the problem with a lot of prog music. Great music, but tended to repeat itself instead of growing.

  • @stevecoote228
    @stevecoote228 4 года назад +14

    Thank you guys. Great choice. I first saw ELP way back in 1974. The played the whole of Karn Evil (Carnival) 9 live. Man they were an excellent live band. All virtuoso's. The song is about a dystopic future. The Carnival displayed rarities that had long disappeared from our world. Hence A real blade of grass, be careful as you pass. Eventually there is a war between man and computer. Man gets wiped out and the computers win. I understand the film rights have been sold and there is a plan to make a film based on this song. Next up try either Tarkus another epic song or Trilogy or if you want Piano genius try Take a Pebble. You need to bear in mind this music is almost 50 years old. Also Keith Emerson worked closely with Bob Moog himself and helped pioneer and develop the Moog Synthesizer. Look forward to the next ELP song.

  • @lindaa4883
    @lindaa4883 4 года назад +56

    Ok if you don’t want any more frenetic try “Lucky Man” or “Still...you turn me on” Love both pieces. I recommend you watch their sound check of “fanfare for the common man”

    • @voiceover2191
      @voiceover2191 3 года назад +1

      I disagree Linda, i consider them rather weak songs, way too mellow for me, though well done, even though Lucky Man is probably their best known song. And sorry, but Fanfare is absolute rubbish to me, completely uninspired and they can play that with their eyes closed. If you want less frenetic, I'd advice Take a Pebble from their first album.

  • @annette4660
    @annette4660 3 года назад +4

    Great job, guys. I love your saying that Greg Lake's singing was super generous and just for your enjoyment of it. Like he just gives his all, just for us. Nice way to look at it.

  • @59jeflew
    @59jeflew 3 года назад +5

    Saw these guys live in the 70’s. Incredible.

  • @tomdevore9576
    @tomdevore9576 4 года назад +15

    Saw ELP live several times, the "Brain Salad Surgery" tour was an masterpiece. Love Prog rock, and these lads were the best at it. During this tour the arena was set up in Quad with speakers and the sound traveled around the arena, it was the greatest concert that I ever saw, and I saw all the great bands of the '70s.
    Keith Emerson- keyboards/piano
    Greg Lake - vocals and guitar
    Carl Palmer - drums and percussionist.
    All excellent musicians for sure....

    • @domioele3346
      @domioele3346 4 года назад

      Here is a drum solo by Carl Palmer: ruclips.net/video/WBfDJwLIeRY/видео.html He is 67 years old in this video.

  • @rcdolphin714
    @rcdolphin714 4 года назад +44

    You just had the pleasure of listening to three of the finest musicians to ever grace a vinyl record. My interpretation of the lyrics is that he's telling a story of a futuristic world where simple things we enjoy today are now rare and in a museum (like "there behind the glass stands a real blade of grass"). This futuristic world may be dystopian or maybe mankind simply destroyed most of what we enjoy today?

    • @michellewhaley3489
      @michellewhaley3489 4 года назад +1

      I’m pretty sure mankind destroyed most of what we enjoy 😔

    • @stevemd6488
      @stevemd6488 4 года назад +4

      Peter Sinfield wrote most of the lyrics he was Greg Lake's lyric partner

  • @davidmiles533
    @davidmiles533 3 года назад +8

    Thank you both for having the courage to play the entire piece. Well done.

  • @tenor20
    @tenor20 4 года назад +8

    Pirates! Totally accessible - beautifully orchestrated - you'll love it!

    • @mellymom1121
      @mellymom1121 3 года назад +1

      One of my personal favorites!

  • @briangilbert230
    @briangilbert230 4 года назад +95

    "Lucky Man" is closer in production value to "In the beginning".Next ELP song please.

    • @wesleiribeiro9096
      @wesleiribeiro9096 4 года назад +2

      Yeah 🤟🤟🤟🤟🤟💯💯💯

    • @Shawney-jf6kc
      @Shawney-jf6kc 4 года назад +1

      Yes please!

    • @stevemd6488
      @stevemd6488 4 года назад +11

      That or Still You Turn Me On"

    • @papalaz4444244
      @papalaz4444244 4 года назад +3

      These are kinda really Greg Lake songs rather than prog.

    • @raywesch7757
      @raywesch7757 4 года назад

      Fanfair For the Common Man

  • @rodneywortman4698
    @rodneywortman4698 4 года назад +53

    Two more ELP suggestions, both covers.
    1. Jerusalem. It’s a hymn that’s used in the Church of England.
    2. Mussorgsky’s Pictures At An Exhibition
    Phenomenal

    • @BroadwayJosh
      @BroadwayJosh 4 года назад

      Yes! Forgot about those two

    • @richardnanian6075
      @richardnanian6075 4 года назад +1

      “Jerusalem” is indeed used as a hymn, but it’s actually an excerpt from one of the radical Romantic poet and artist William Blake’s visionary books, which is anything but conventionally religious.

    • @sibkiss2009
      @sibkiss2009 4 года назад +3

      Knife Edge on this album?

    • @davideig4281
      @davideig4281 4 года назад

      @@sibkiss2009 Knife Edge was the 3rd song on their debut- self titled LP.

    • @LyndaHill
      @LyndaHill 4 года назад

      Stirring and brilliant.

  • @tonyjolley832
    @tonyjolley832 4 года назад +25

    Do all of The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway by Genesis next. Any Peter Gabriel era Genesis

    • @therealantiarchitect
      @therealantiarchitect 3 года назад +3

      Definitely Lamb Lies Down. That whole album blew me away when I first heard it. I was literally stunned. The problem is it's a concept album, so taking a single song out of it would be like reading ten pages of a novel.

    • @ringrock76
      @ringrock76 3 года назад +2

      The Lamb Lies Down is in my absolute favorite album of all time. It is a true masterpiece.

    • @histrion2
      @histrion2 3 года назад +1

      Really, there's so much great long-form Genesis material, even after Peter left. Even after Steve Hackett left, too! The entire Lamb record might be a bit much for a video, but Supper's Ready or Dance on a Volcano would be great.

    • @rbrearey
      @rbrearey 3 года назад

      All great, but I would consider “Selling England by the Pound” the 101 class for Gabriel-era Genesis. But second Supper’s Ready and add The Musical Box from Nursery Cryme.

    • @CharlieGroh
      @CharlieGroh 3 года назад

      My first Genesis album was Selling England by the Pound...I’m still amazed by the title track. Yah, Lamb Lies Down is breathtaking but for licks, I’ll take Selling England by the Pound.

  • @pseudomass
    @pseudomass 4 года назад +8

    saw them live when this album just came out.... in quadrophonic surround!!! they opened with karn evil. mind blowing

    • @perklambert2160
      @perklambert2160 5 месяцев назад

      I didn’t think anyone would remember the quadraphonic surround except me. Made for a fabulous concert. I bought a small system for home. Sounded great.

  • @robertcartier5088
    @robertcartier5088 4 года назад +48

    Karn Evil 9 News: In February, it was announced that there will be a Science Fiction film made based on this song!

    • @blanetalk
      @blanetalk 4 года назад +4

      YES!

    • @Beau_T_McBoatface
      @Beau_T_McBoatface 4 года назад +2

      That's amazing. I can't even imagine.............

    • @nancy9478
      @nancy9478 4 года назад

      Read the lyrics to the first part. Its scarily close to the truth that has been hidden for years. The world is waking up.

  • @KennyTaylor_JesusIsLord
    @KennyTaylor_JesusIsLord 4 года назад +19

    Ironically, Keith was such a consummate musician that after having medical issues and nerve damage that had basically left him with only the use of 3 fingers on each hand, he chose to commit suicide rather than face an upcoming Japan tour, not wishing to disappoint his fans. On most of ELP's other work, especially the Works Volume 1 and 2 albums, you find some of Keith's best classical and jazz work. Carl Palmer was one of the premier drummers of the time also playing for the super-group Asia. Greg Lake on bass and guitar came from King Crimson and IMHO recorded some of the best vocals in the rock / prog-rock era. H.R. Giger painted the album cover for Brain Salad Surgery. He also designed the alien creatures in the Alien movies. The model for the album cover was Giger's model / partner Li Tobler.

    • @smithmann5616
      @smithmann5616 4 года назад +2

      Maybe, but he had that issue for 20 years. I saw him interviewed about a month before and he looked perfectly happy. Just because his girlfriend said that doesn't make it true. Could be other issues. But could also be antidepressants. Who knows.

    • @dragonsifunc
      @dragonsifunc 4 года назад +3

      Don't leave Pete Sinfield out of the credits for amazing contributions. Absolutely stunning and timeless lyrics.

    • @ikofire1
      @ikofire1 3 года назад

      Palmer is 70 now and still absolutely wails! one of the all time greats.. All 3 of them were the leaders in there craft.. Nobody has reached Emerson's talent and showmanship. Emerson GOAT.

  • @MargaretLeber
    @MargaretLeber 4 года назад +29

    Talking over the "seven virgins and a mule" line.... tsk tsk tsk

    • @robertsilver5130
      @robertsilver5130 3 года назад

      One of the best comments here. When I first heard that line many, many years ago as a teenaged boy -- and made sure I understood that's in fact what Greg was singing -- I had the simultaneous feeling of excitement and revulsion. It really started cementing what the whole piece was about (to me).

    • @MargaretLeber
      @MargaretLeber 3 года назад

      @@robertsilver5130 Keep it cool, keep it cool.

  • @florazaken-greenberg1697
    @florazaken-greenberg1697 3 года назад +12

    Keith Emerson: a genius without comparison.

    • @howardsobel1871
      @howardsobel1871 3 года назад

      Rick Wakeman?

    • @waynemarvin5661
      @waynemarvin5661 Год назад

      @@howardsobel1871 Wakeman, No.2. Sorry. But if you enjoy "classical-rock", listen to some Rachel Flowers.

  • @jupiterlegrand4817
    @jupiterlegrand4817 4 года назад +11

    By the way, I love your comments. It is SO good to see guys your age diving into this and getting hit the same way we did in '73/4. You get blown away and it's like "Ohhhh, so THIS is what you can do with rock music if you REALLY have talent!" It's real emotional to hear this stuff again and to see that you guys get it. Thanks for this video.

    • @arkyokie1
      @arkyokie1 3 года назад +1

      Yes! This is what we did and still do! Listening to all the great vinyl with headphones! Grew up with this.

  • @denystull355
    @denystull355 4 года назад +29

    I still remember the "Welcome Back My Friends to the Show that Never Ends" concert and seeing them close out with this song, all three impressions just like on the album "Brain Salad Surgery". And if that wasn't enough they came back for an encore and did "Pictures at an Exhibition".

    • @kathrinepearson7528
      @kathrinepearson7528 4 года назад +1

      "There behind the glass there's a real blade of grass"

    • @thomasmccracken8819
      @thomasmccracken8819 4 года назад +1

      I went to the Brain Salad Surgery concert way back in the day they had their speaker stacks set up in a quad setup with a stack in each corner of the arena . Totally effen great show. The loudest concert I've ever seen seriously my ears rang for like two days.

    • @denystull355
      @denystull355 4 года назад +1

      @@thomasmccracken8819 Yeah the concert was in quad. Quad was supposed to supplant stereo but besides Brain Salad Surgery the only other quad release I remember was "Quadrophenia" by The Who.

    • @johnfoster5295
      @johnfoster5295 4 года назад

      The thing I like is Karn Evil 9 was tracked as one song on this album.

    • @kenwelch198
      @kenwelch198 4 года назад +1

      Performing on a stool see the sight to make you drool, seven virgins and a mule, keep it cool, keep it cool.

  • @davidbooth7778
    @davidbooth7778 4 года назад +3

    Remember, guys.....this is 3 musicians.

  • @wb2fcr
    @wb2fcr 4 года назад +4

    Thanks for the music Keith. It touches my heart every time I listen even after all these years. Rest In Peace my friend.

  • @calvinwboaz7085
    @calvinwboaz7085 4 года назад +32

    Lucky Man should be next.

  • @alanhynd7886
    @alanhynd7886 4 года назад +17

    The reason 1st impression has a long bit and then a subsequent, 'condensed' bit was due to the need to split the music over two sides of vinyl.

  • @johnimhof6568
    @johnimhof6568 3 года назад +4

    I saw them 5 times and was blown away every time. RIP Keith and Greg.

  • @gj8683
    @gj8683 4 года назад +6

    "Pictures at an Exhibition" is epic, and live. Definitely worth a brain soaking.

  • @johnfoster5295
    @johnfoster5295 4 года назад +105

    If you want to dive into some epic prog I suggest:
    Supper's Ready by Genesis
    The Gates Of Delerium by Yes
    Thick As A Brick by Jethro Tull
    Mind you, Thick As A Brick is the entire album but it's only one song. It's split into 2 parts because it was spread across 2 sides of the album. The Yes and Genesis tracks are more manageable at 22 and 23 minutes, respectively. Most Genesis fans consider Supper's Ready to be their best song. By the way, First Impression part 2 was a big radio hit for ELP back in the day.

    • @johnfoster5295
      @johnfoster5295 4 года назад +3

      @@ianmc8671 The title alone warrants a listen. Plus it's a great song, so there's that.

    • @jeffschielka7845
      @jeffschielka7845 4 года назад +6

      @@ianmc8671 I think CTTE blew them away. Being prog virgins its hard to react to 18 minutes of greatness. The album is one of the greatest prog albums of all time and has been voted on in many polls.

    • @everydirection990
      @everydirection990 4 года назад +9

      Once they've assimilated Supper's Ready and maybe a few other Genesis epics, they should experience The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway in one sitting, the way it's meant to be heard!

    • @bobbyg7102
      @bobbyg7102 4 года назад +8

      Yes, Gates of Delirium. No doubt

    • @jgsrhythm100
      @jgsrhythm100 4 года назад +5

      Peter Gabriel era Genisis!!
      Peter Gabriel solo!!!!
      Phil Collins great drummer.
      Turns Genisis into pop band.
      Solo Phil Collins VS solo,Peter Gabriel.
      Both way talented though I'm going with Gabrie!

  • @jimhattaway7283
    @jimhattaway7283 4 года назад +34

    Gents, I'm sure you felt audibly sandblasted after this epic. This is one of those mind blowing prog classics and a bit overbearing on the first listen. Keep in mind these works are like symphonies, i.e. Shostakovich's 11th, Beethoven's 9th. It will take multiple listens, they take you through the full gamut of feelings and emotions through diverse musical styles. And let's not leave out the talent of those three, stellar!

    • @williamcorkery2716
      @williamcorkery2716 4 года назад +2

      First listen and I get what you r saying with regards to symphonies,, probably like suppers ready by genesis needs two or three listens to get it.

    • @modifish68
      @modifish68 4 года назад +3

      I mentioned in another post that ELP was along with Yes, my gateway to classical music. It opened my 13yo mind up to music on the whole in the early 80's. If people have never been, I recommend going to a symphony concert. The first time I went to one, the orchestra performed Beethoven's 6th (Pastoral Symphony).... I Cried....full out tears down my cheeks.....I was so embarrassed, but it was so beautiful my emotions poured out....Had to listen to Iron Maiden on the way home to recover my manhood. Lol....

    • @jimhattaway7283
      @jimhattaway7283 4 года назад +2

      @@modifish68 Yes, good analogy on the gateway, I agree. I played trombone in band, so had a little exposure to different genres, i.e.,symphonic band. But Yes and ELP covering classical music pieces, along with the mellotron usage by so many prog bands lured me into classical full bore. I would say prog and classical take up 70% of my musical diet now.

  • @cigarboxguitar9519
    @cigarboxguitar9519 4 года назад +10

    What about those drums though? Give Carl some love.

  • @michaelbevan539
    @michaelbevan539 4 года назад +2

    One of my all time favorites. I enjoyed hearing it again and enjoyed your appreciation of the talent.