Ten Years After - Good Morning Little School Girl - 8/4/1975 - Winterland | REACTION/REVIEW
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- Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
- Ten Years After - Good Morning Little School Girl - 8/4/1975 - Winterland | REACTION/REVIEW
BizMatik Reviews and Reacts to Ten Years After - Good Morning Little School Girl - 8/4/1975 - Winterland
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#tenyearsafter #goodmorninglittleschoolgirl #reaction - Развлечения
Leo is a badass on bass and very underappreciated as is the entire band. Leo is my favorite bassist.
Always giving everything he got
First class, so amazing TYA forever. Love this band so much . So hot!❤
Band that did not get the love they deserved. Great story about this band.....when my kids were young (many moons ago) and were driving us nuts on a rainy day, I used to put on the live version of "I'm Going Home" and tell them they had to dance to the whole song, in time with the rhythm section. Naps followed shortly there after LOL
Alvin Lee was a underrated guitarist ya boy could jam The bass is on point to
Alvin Lee was highly respected and popular in the 70’s , it is just they got forgotten over the years, just like so many other super bands
Wow! Alvin Lee brings the thunder on that one. Great Bass as well. How these guys are not in the H.O.F is beyond comprehension.
Leo Lyons is awesome on bass
Not only was Alvin Lee an unbelievable guitarist, he was, by all accounts one if the nicest blokes you woukd ever meet. A caring and gentle man thst gave 110% every time he played.
Alvin, uno de mis preferidos !!!! Maestro !!
They have a great discography. Suggestions: "Woke Up This Morning", 50.000 Miles Beneath My Brain", "I'd Love To Change the World".
"Sonny Boy" Williamson first recorded Good Morning Little School Girl in 1937; the Beatles, Rolling Stone, Yardsbirds, and Claton
were all obsessed with early American blues (Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Sonny Boy Williams, etc.) Ten Years After is another
band that took the blues and paid homage to their heroes by putting a modern sonic rock & roll beat to the Masters of The Blues.
Thanks, Biz, It's great to hear the great music from the past that made us such a large part of my early 20s. Tend Years After is
greatly underrated.
Since when were the Beatles obsessed with American blues? If they were, they never played any.
Yes , definitely more Ten Years After ! ! !
Alvin was a force! Played his songs over, and over, and over...
I saw them on this tour, about 2 and a half months earlier (in May), in Birmingham, AL, at an outdoor event (Leslie West and Mother's Finest opening). And I also saw them, again in Birmingham, at a different venue (Boutwell Auditorium) two years earlier (also in May) in "73. Actually, one does not see TYA live, one EXPERIENCES TYA live.
Look for the track, from this same show, called 'I Can't Keep From Crying, Sometimes'. There a little trouble with his guitar going out of tune at the very beginning, but he recovers without stopping the song. Tuning "on the fly!"
the bassist moves inspired the bassist character of the Muppet show
Whoever picked this is THE BOMB
He really Needs to get into Blackberry Smoke 🇺🇸🏁
One of these days best song seen them 2 times Germany 1972 live in Army
I was a big Alvin Lee fan and that bass player is absolutely crazy
Biz, Alvin Lee is definitely worth exploring. "I'd Love to Change the World," "Let the Sky Fall," and "One of These Days" are 3 good ones off of the Space in Time LP. I saw Alvin Lee in mid70s.
Same show i cant keep from crying.
Winterland in San Francisco was an old skating rink, hence the name, owned and operated by Mr. Bill Graham. He put on hundreds of concerts at the arena, which he finally had to close down on New Yeats Eve 1978, with his favorite band, the Grateful Dead, and The Blues Brothers. Footage exists of both performances, which are AMAZING. Many many bands graced the stage at Winterland, Led Zeppelin, Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Band recorded "The Last Waltz" there, Pink Floyd, The Rolling Stones, and...Ten Years After. This venue seemed to bring out the best in the bands when they played there.
Went to a few shows there 73/74 while in the coast guard. Steve Miller, Frank Zap. Peace ✌️
Chicago played there. 1970. Lots of Bands hung out there. When San Francisco was in the Groove.
Glad to see you're wanting to do some more studio TYA, though of course their live stuff was amazing. "Choo Choo Mama" would be a great studio review! It's a pretty straight-ahead banger too. From the album of the same name, "Rock and Roll Music to the World" is a little slower tempo banger with a really different hook.
"Hear Me Calling" Stonehenge album 1969. Great Bass line. Saw them at a club in Brooklyn NY (L'Mores) late '80s. Enjoy your reactions 🎸
Leo kills the bass on this, but really, they all do!
Go baby Go!
Have no idea why you suddenly seem to prefer mostly live tunes, but in this case, it works. BADASS tune...
If you want to see their really hardcore jazz-rock roots playing tiny pubs in the early sixties, check out a Woody Herman cover who was from the big band era which was still really popular at that time although it was fading, the Woody Herman song is called Woodchoppers Ball. It sounds to me like a board tape from a live recording in a small Club, but either way, it's really early, it's really raw, and it just shows you the raw talent and it's where those guys got super tight together, much like the Beatles in Hamburg before they broke huge.
But they changed with every album and it was always really interesting. Every album had all interesting songs or pretty much all interesting songs, laugh. Cricklewood green is a fan fave somewhat earlier album. But there is much to be picked up off that iconic A Space in Time album which contains the mega-hit I'd Love to Change the World.
The opening song of the album, is incredible. It's a slow build and then it goes nuts but they have all these interesting transitions between songs on that album. It's all so well put together. There's one that is encouraging people who are depressed at best and suicidal at worst to follow his advice and it's a very heartfelt earnest song and he says he's been there too, and that's why it's called, I've been there too.
The first song on side B of the album is incredible, Once There Was a Time. It's mostly very humorous and just a vehicle to take something really slow and kind of super simple with just acoustic guitar and then it turns into a jam and then the words are absolutely hilarious and then they just go nuts and then they bring it home even more intensely. It's a fantastic song to lead off the side of an album.
Great performance! TYA needs to be in the rrhof
Sweet now you're doing it brother.
Alvin lee - bluest blues . he does this with george harrison
Between Alvin Lee, Richie Blackmore and Johnny Winter for who was the first guitar shreader.
Absolutley from their Live Album "Undead" Woodchoppers Ball
Consummate Blues Rock jam .
High level improvisation .
This is a great song but my favorites are I'd Love to change the World, Slow Blues in C. and You Give Me Loving
Try listening to Jonny Lang's version of this song he was around 16 when he did his version has a great catalog 🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶
He's also fantastic on the guitar 🎸🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶
You gotta note He says he's a little Schoolboy too! He's assuming that viewpoint!
Finally Ten Years After. Your the First one to really get into Them. They were Great at Woodstock 🪴🌄🐴