Drum Teacher Reaction: CARL PALMER | Emerson, Lake & Palmer - 'Toccata' | (FIRST TIME HEARING THEM!)

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  • Опубликовано: 17 авг 2022
  • OG Video | • Toccata (2014 - Remaster)
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    #emersonlakeandpalmer #reaction #toccata
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Комментарии • 759

  • @AndrewRooneyDrums
    @AndrewRooneyDrums  Год назад +7

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    • @zygotezygotten6485
      @zygotezygotten6485 Год назад +2

      'Toccata' is not a good representation of Carl Palmer's percussion talent and skill. His live Karn Evil 9 solos from the early '70s are his signature works----stunning displays of incredible technical virtuosity and sustained power. Carl Palmer is one of the all-time great percussionists, regardless of musical genre.

    • @markhamilton3477
      @markhamilton3477 Год назад +1

      ELP never overdubbed anything. I have seen them 14 times live and every album sound you hear you can hear and see live. You can find plenty of videos and see them playing the same thing live. Surprised you did not pick up on the drum synthesizers.

    • @someone4857
      @someone4857 Год назад

      @@markhamilton3477 Didn’t they overdub “Abaddon’s Bolero”?

    • @markhamilton3477
      @markhamilton3477 Год назад

      @@someone4857 not in the least. I have heard them in concert many times playing the piece. There is no need to overdub with their ability and Keith took pride in the fact that he would not did that sort of cheap junk.

    • @oldmanghost219
      @oldmanghost219 Год назад

      @@markhamilton3477 They did do overdubbing. The live 3rd impression is missing some of the sounds. When they recorded Brain Salad Surgery they actually say they did not want to do overdubbing because of all the overdubbing they did in the past. They wanted to play the songs in concert. On Brain Salad Surgery there is not much, just in the 3rd impression and i think Still You Turn Me on. The original Lucky Man - Greg did a lot of - Quote - "over overlaying" while Keith was gone.. He can't play 2 guitars at the same time.

  • @your_local_dummy4137
    @your_local_dummy4137 Год назад +158

    No overdubs here. They played this live. Just three amazing guys.

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Год назад +5

      That's awesome Kevin. WOW

    • @yes_head
      @yes_head Год назад +8

      They did play it live, although of course there are overdubs on the studio version. I doubt Carl could be hitting the gong or bells while he's already using both arms on the tympani.

    • @your_local_dummy4137
      @your_local_dummy4137 Год назад +40

      @@yes_head You can see that Carl positioned the rope for the bell just in front of his mouth. So he would bite the rope and pull it using his head. He was also the first to use electronic drums. So I am sure some of the electronic drums were programmed to play sections when hit. So no overdubbing live.

    • @lloydhlavac6807
      @lloydhlavac6807 Год назад +17

      @@yes_head Oh he could play both at the same time. Take a look at this video of him and you will see for yourself: ruclips.net/video/8pT_JM-uHuY/видео.html

    • @brianglock3099
      @brianglock3099 Год назад +18

      Listen to the live version on “Welcome Back My Friends To The Show That Never Ends…..” album also has great performances of Tarkus, Hoedown and Karn Evil 9. All live, three musicians.

  • @lancetronify
    @lancetronify Год назад +91

    I saw ELP live twice.
    I realized the first time seeing them, that I was in the presence of genius.
    RIP Keith and Greg

    • @damirhlobik6488
      @damirhlobik6488 Год назад +7

      RIP Keith and Greg, I will allways remember YOU, you made my life better
      Carl, keep on going, forewer my favourite drums player, noboy is even close to YOU, with all respect to Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich, you put drumming on another level

    • @davebrau
      @davebrau Год назад +1

      10:19 all the sounds are Carl’s electronic drums.

    • @marc2397
      @marc2397 4 месяца назад +1

      I missed them, and I regret it too this day.

    • @roykowalski4125
      @roykowalski4125 2 месяца назад

      Myself Included. Seen them 2 times and concluded they were master musicians..

  • @jupiterlegrand4817
    @jupiterlegrand4817 Год назад +55

    Three of the greatest prog musicians ever. Live, this was almost terrifying. Louder than a 747, shaking every molecule in your body, sounding like multiple orchestras, and it was just these three guys...

    • @johnoster5429
      @johnoster5429 20 дней назад

      I saw them in 1974--they were indeed terrifyingly loud, but the sound was crystal clear due to the MASSIVE PA system. "Toccata" was just just jaw-dropping! (The entire show was.)

  • @bretttiesmaki981
    @bretttiesmaki981 Год назад +59

    This song is an adaptation of a 1961 classical piece called "Toccata Concertata" by the Argentine composer Alberto Ginastera (1916 - 1983). It was arranged by Emerson, Lake & Palmer by their keyboard player, Keith Emerson, who had a keen interest in classical music.

  • @rokker101
    @rokker101 Год назад +97

    If it wasn't for Keith Emerson you wouldn't have the keyboards you have today he was the maestro ..I'm really surprised you've never heard of Carl palmer he is hailed as one of the greatest and well respected drummers of all time and there are no overdubs in carls solo

    • @neilgoldsmith482
      @neilgoldsmith482 Год назад +3

      Don’t forget Rick Wakeman

    • @rokker101
      @rokker101 Год назад +3

      @@neilgoldsmith482 of course not! ... rick and keith were big pals ... Im off to see rick this december!

    • @colinjones724
      @colinjones724 Год назад +5

      @@neilgoldsmith482 I loved Rick for what he did with Yes, but as an out and out player, he wasn't a patch on Keith

    • @morbidmanmusic
      @morbidmanmusic Год назад

      Please stop with the over hype.

    • @neilgoldsmith482
      @neilgoldsmith482 Год назад +4

      @@morbidmanmusic what do you know about talent?

  • @passtheparcel360
    @passtheparcel360 4 месяца назад +14

    Carl palmer is one of the greatest drummers of all time. How could you not know him?

  • @johnduval633
    @johnduval633 Год назад +17

    After 50years of going to rock concerts CARL PALMER is still the greatest drummer I've ever seen live. The man was and still is amazing!

  • @justingoulet9714
    @justingoulet9714 Год назад +90

    He uses mallets no overdubs I saw them live Did this note for note Emerson multi- keyboards One of the greatest bands live Carl great soloist There are ballads Jazz Classical One of the biggest and successful Prog bands You never heard Lucky Man huge hit from their debut album Lake lead vocal and bass /guitar wrote this song when he was 12 years old Lake was also bass and vocals on King Crimson's debut Carl Palmer GIANT

    • @jimdukeproject
      @jimdukeproject Год назад +5

      Carl Palmer is a master at playing busy but not sounding overwhelming or intruding on the other instruments.

    • @dourmoose
      @dourmoose Год назад +6

      I saw them in 1977. Fantastic show.

    • @SRV2013
      @SRV2013 Год назад +6

      Saw them do this three times from 1973-1977.

    • @bobcorbin3294
      @bobcorbin3294 Год назад +2

      @@dourmoose saw them with an orchestra here in Nashville that tour1977

    • @toddmcdowell5194
      @toddmcdowell5194 Год назад +5

      You can watch a RUclips video of him playing it live at the 1974 California Jam. Here's a link (not the best quality): ruclips.net/video/MgaETQh4uXg/видео.html

  • @AndrewRooneyDrums
    @AndrewRooneyDrums  Год назад +39

    Finally getting to one of the heavy hitters that people have been asking for... CARL PALMER!

    • @Keith_KC8TCQ
      @Keith_KC8TCQ Год назад +4

      Carl Palmer has a snare drum only solo video that you HAVE to check out.
      He proves my theory to be true, to truly master the drum set, you have to master each individual component, to be able to get all of the sounds out of a single instrument.

    • @FrancescoDeBiasi
      @FrancescoDeBiasi Год назад +1

      You could also check "The Barbarian" from the debut album. Palmer is all over the place on that one

  • @dharlow5810
    @dharlow5810 Год назад +42

    Three of the greatest artist in the prog genre. Keith, top 3 keyboards, Greg, pure vocals, and Carl was fantastic on drums.

    • @cybore213
      @cybore213 Год назад +4

      Greg, pure vocals, bass and guitar.

    • @johnlattarulo2578
      @johnlattarulo2578 Год назад +1

      Carl Palmer, best drummer in rock.

  • @bobkessler937
    @bobkessler937 Год назад +61

    This is an adaptation of a Toccata by Alberto Ginastera. The trio of ELP covered it note-for-note live (check out the live cut on the album "Welcome Back My Friends). BTW, they had recorded the track without clearing the rights with Ginastera. Emerson flew out to see him with an almost completed mix. Ginastera was very impressed and complimentary and allowed them to release the ELP version.
    Yes, it may sound dated now, but it was very fresh and original when it was released.
    Just for fun, you should check out ELP's adaptation of Pictures at an Exhibition.
    Keith Emerson's previous band, The Nice, were famous for their classical interpretations, such as Bach's Water Music; Third Movement, "Pathetique" by Tchaikovsky; and America from West side Story by Bernstein and Sondheim (which ELP occasionally played live, as well).

    • @GBWagner1
      @GBWagner1 Год назад +15

      I add to the story that Ginastera didn,t speak English, and said - after listening to Emerson,s adaptation: "Diabolique." Keith thought that G. doesn,t like his version and nearly threw it into the dustbin, but Ginastera's wife made him clear that the maestro likes it, so gave the rights. Anyway to me it is not dated. It,s a forever masterpiece of music. Greetings from Hungary

    • @randymartin2165
      @randymartin2165 Год назад +3

      Very cool, never heard this story! Thanks for sharing!

    • @Humb7757
      @Humb7757 Год назад

      The Live Cut…from welcome…is the most dynamic piece! Thunderous!! Beautifully Recorded live!! ELP…the Greatest live Band Ever!!

    • @reinhardt2002
      @reinhardt2002 Год назад +1

      Man...In today's music scene, these old records sound avant-garde. Try E.V.A. by Jean Luc Perrey from a 1970's record and compare it to Mobi today and other Techno DJs. 😉

    • @mlinderict
      @mlinderict Месяц назад

      Sorry, Water Music was Handel

  • @kensolar69
    @kensolar69 Год назад +24

    No overdubs. Watch videos of him playing live, doesn't miss a note.
    My favorite all time drummer. Check out the album "Works".

  • @magmasunburst9331
    @magmasunburst9331 Год назад +44

    Emerson was a master synthesist. I've never heard his sounds called dated before.

    • @hubbsllc
      @hubbsllc Год назад +18

      Emerson wrung out his instruments. When this was recorded he had the Moog Modular, a Minimoog, a Hohner Clavinet, two Hammonds, and Moog's early prototypes for the Polymoog and the Multimoog. If anyone hears this and calls it "dated," it's only because these days hardly any keyboardists have the determination to do the sorts of things Emerson was doing and he was doing it on equipment that was custom, rare, expensive, and/or unobtainable by the general public.

    • @RMForbes505
      @RMForbes505 Год назад +3

      @@hubbsllc - They were also all analog and hell to keep all those analog oscillators in tune after moving things around. The newer digital equipment has so many advantages to those early synthesizers.

    • @hubbsllc
      @hubbsllc Год назад +9

      @@RMForbes505 At the outset when his Moog was just one cabinet deep, he had a frequency counter sitting on top so he could tune oscillators while the instrument was muted. There’s video of him adjusting stuff with one hand while watching the counter and playing the C-3 with his other hand. I always admired his sheer determination.

    • @RMForbes505
      @RMForbes505 Год назад +5

      @@hubbsllc - which was necessary because the analog oscillators would drift off tune at the slightest reason. In the late 60's I was into amateur radio and had the same issue keeping my radio oscillators on the right frequencies. Today's digital equipment don't have those same issues.

    • @SurferDudeJimmy
      @SurferDudeJimmy Год назад +3

      I was shocked at those comments. Besides Keith brilliant playing, writing, he also had the greatest synth sounds.

  • @TheRKae
    @TheRKae Год назад +29

    ELP is the band that got me interested in music. They were geniuses. Straight up geniuses.

    • @cybore213
      @cybore213 Год назад +2

      ELP is the band that got me into progressive rock. So much great music was produced on the late 60's and 70's!

    • @hubbsllc
      @hubbsllc Год назад +2

      They certainly supercharged *my* interest in music. I'd loved synthesizers since I'd first heard one (SWITCHED-ON BACK) and when I heard the sample-and-hold bit from the WELCOME BACK version of "KE 9 1st" used in a radio commercial for a nightclub, I called up the radio station and asked what it was. Totally hooked ever since.

    • @cybore213
      @cybore213 Год назад

      @@hubbsllc Switched On Bach was the first album I ever bought, at the age of about 12 or 13. I went into the music store and told the sales guy I wanted something different than what you hear on the radio, and that's what he recommended.

    • @hubbsllc
      @hubbsllc Год назад

      @@cybore213 That's marvelous! And note that while there's a whole cottage industry to modular synths and mini-synths now, they're mostly being used to more or less free-run sequences of some sort as opposed to trying to do the likes of what Wendy Carlos worked so tirelessly to create back then.

    • @cybore213
      @cybore213 Год назад +1

      @@hubbsllc I also have the album Radiance by Malcolm Cecil. He gave it to me in the mid 80's when I worked at Epson America. I think he was a "visionary consultant" for the company, or something like that, I was never really sure what his title actually was. Malcolm, along with his partner Robert Margouleff, created TONTO, which is the largest analog synthesizer system ever built. If you're not familiar with TONTO, look it up. It appeared on many albums in the 70's, most notably on 4 Stevie Wonder albums.

  • @AmaNotaGogo
    @AmaNotaGogo 7 месяцев назад +5

    One of their BEST! Kieth Emerson was a genius, Carl is an outstanding drummer.
    Where have you been not to have heard their music before?

  • @darkaether2798
    @darkaether2798 Год назад +26

    Carl Palmer is still a beast! This piece is sometimes described as “scary” 😁

  • @johnloupis2347
    @johnloupis2347 Год назад +25

    I've heard Brain Salad Surgery over a thousand times! (I'm serious) . To me it has a dark medieval feel to it. Never heard anything like it and never will. Turn out the lights and listen to it all. As far as drum solo's listen to Tank or the solo's in the live albums and videos in RUclips. I was lucky enough to see them live 3 times in their prime. Was so freakin' good! Carl brought fitness to drumming. See a picture or video of him in the 70's. A total animal. Elp was all about being able to perform the songs live so what you heard on the albums was just what you saw live. I could write a book here. Turn off the lights and listen to the first 4 or 5 albums alone. It's unpredictable, unusual, clever and just so fun to hear.

    • @kathyratino962
      @kathyratino962 Год назад +2

      I agree. Better yet, lie on the floor in the dark with headphones. You'll feel disembodied.

    • @joeday4293
      @joeday4293 Год назад +4

      Re: "fitness": Carl is 72 and still touring, and for his entire half-century career, he's looked like he could play a three-hour set, then leave the stage and relax by running a marathon. 😳💪

  • @valeriesievenpiper908
    @valeriesievenpiper908 Год назад +9

    Carl Palmer is touring with a tribute to Emerson and Lake. He still has all the moves at 70+ years. Check it out!

  • @AltGrendel
    @AltGrendel Год назад +25

    5:23 the thing you need to keep in mind is that this is when these dated sounds were created and widely heard for the first time. No one else was programming a synth like Emerson was at the time.

    • @joeday4293
      @joeday4293 Год назад +6

      I read an interview with Dennis DeYoung of Styx, who said that the first time "Lucky Man" hit the radio with the famous Moog solo at the end, keys players everywhere said "What the hell was THAT?!? And where do I get one?"

    • @ghanus2009
      @ghanus2009 Год назад +2

      True, at that time, this was far ahead of its time. Even the story of Karn Evil 9 is a bit talking about how AI is takign over our computing world... THATS profound given it was written over 50 years ago.

    • @garygomesvedicastrology
      @garygomesvedicastrology Год назад +3

      The electronic sounds near the end of the drum solo were triggered by Carl Palmer directly by a synth connected to his drums. It might have been the first time this was done.

    • @christophermorrison8632
      @christophermorrison8632 Год назад +4

      Agreed, and it's clearly creatively something out of time altogether. No band has ever come close to using the technology it had so comprehensively. Karen Evil 9 is the Beethoven's fifth of rock music if you ask me. Nothing remotely as creative and dextrous has been written before or since.

    • @Fontsman
      @Fontsman Год назад +1

      Emerson was a giant. There was also Jan Hammer with Mahavishnu and George Duke with Zappa. A great time for virtuoso keyboardists.

  • @frankkolton1780
    @frankkolton1780 Год назад +49

    I'm surprised that someone who teaches the drums isn't real familiar with Carl Palmer and his work with ELP. I would think that any long time musician would be well versed in the top players in his field. If drums my specialty, I would want to study the historic greats in rock, Latin, and most importantly jazz.

    • @dcadventures2394
      @dcadventures2394 Год назад +14

      I was thinking the same. I was surprised he didn’t know Carl Palmer and ELP. Carl is one of the greats.

    • @hubbsllc
      @hubbsllc Год назад +9

      @@dcadventures2394 There were a lot of drummers whose playing I loved and learned from but my Big Three were Palmer, Peart, and Cobham.

    • @JonathanLivingston87
      @JonathanLivingston87 Год назад +1

      Same, but at the end it's quite impossible knowing every valid musician on this earth; for sure he knows some great guy that we are totally unaware of ;)

    • @JonathanLivingston87
      @JonathanLivingston87 Год назад +3

      I mean, anyone knows about "Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso"? A super great progresssive rock band in the 70' from Italy, and they were at the same level of ELP, but almost no one know them, even in Italy

    • @ghanus2009
      @ghanus2009 Год назад +2

      And hes English also.

  • @TheRKae
    @TheRKae Год назад +15

    ELP were MASTERS of contrasts. "Toccata" is followed on the album by "Still... You Turn Me On," a pleasant, beautiful ballad. They played all styles of music and bounced from one to the next with ease.

  • @stevenparker4684
    @stevenparker4684 Год назад +7

    Carl Palmer is one of the best percussionist ever, and no overdubs on the drums.

  • @vincelewis8360
    @vincelewis8360 Год назад +23

    As for "overdubs" - probably less than you think. This album was deliberately created with fewer overdubs, as the band found their earlier stuff harder to play live. This album was created for them to play live 😁

    • @frankwhorf1156
      @frankwhorf1156 Год назад +1

      I heard them in an interview. What they wrote was ment to be played live. Just 3 amazing people.

  • @joeday4293
    @joeday4293 Год назад +19

    Hurray, you finally got around to one of my favorite bands and absolutely one of my favorite drummers! ELP was one of the early titans of prog rock, and a supergroup - Keith Emerson (kbd) from The Nice, Greg Lake (bs/gtr/voc) from King Crimson (that's him singing "21st Century Schizoid Man" and "In The Court Of The Crimson King"), and Carl Palmer of Atomic Rooster. Their first gig was in front of 100+k people at the 1970 Isle Of Wight Festival, playing a badass reimagination of Mussorgsky's "Pictures At An Exhibition," which you can hear as an album from a later live performance. Carl is the last surviving member.
    Carl Palmer is a trailblazer in so many ways. First of all, IMO the greatest hands of any rock drummer ever - flawless, very schooled technique. Second, he was the very first drummer to have a massive kit on a rotating riser at live shows, which included two timps, temple blocks, chimes, not one but TWO gongs as heard here, and even a church bell, rung by yanking a cord held between his teeth while wailing away on said gongs in his drum solo; you can tell Neil Peart, Phil Collins, etc. were taking notes on his setup. Third: at 10:20 you are hearing possibly the very first electronic drum triggers in history, triggering Moog synthesizers (the other candidate being the great Billy Cobham on his album "Stratus," which came out within months of "Brain Salad Surgery). Fourth: my God, his custom stainless steel drumset was the stuff of legend; look up "Carl Palmer stainless steel drums" on RUclips to see a short video that intersperses a circa 2010 interview with clips of an old BBC program from 1973 where he showed it off, complete with a commentary about those triggers: "When the album came out, people thought those were keyboards. No. They were drums."
    And last but not least: while ELP did overdub some things, they could reproduce very nearly every note from the studio live on stage, just the three of them. They were a dazzling live band. And you can see live video of this piece being performed, at the 1974 California jam. It must be seen to be believed.
    As for more accessible tunes: surely you know "Lucky Man and/or "From The Beginning," right? My recommendation for your next ELP reaction is "Bitches' Crystal," a prog-jazz-waltz that is one of my favorite things they ever did.

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Год назад +7

      Thank you so much. I'm intrigued. Hope to get to more!

    • @PK1971PK
      @PK1971PK Год назад +4

      Great comment--you went thru most of what I wanted to say. I'll only elaborate a little more on Carl's drum set and the show he put on with it. As you've mentioned, one of the most elaborate sets you've ever seen--don't know if anyone could beat it in 1974--that rotated when he did his drum solo. When it had turned all the way around so that you saw the back of the two huge gongs, there were dragons painted on them that were lit by strobe lights. The Brain Salad Surgery tour was my first major concert ever, and this was one of the many coolest things I had ever seen. Not to mention the concert was in quadrophonic sound. The climax of the concert, the end of "Karn Evil Nine", that digital sequencer in quad was simply indescribable. ELP were not only great musicians, but very good showmen as well.

  • @papalaz4444244
    @papalaz4444244 Год назад +19

    "Toccata" is an adaptation of Ginastera's 1st piano concerto, 4th movement.

    • @joeday4293
      @joeday4293 Год назад +6

      And Ginastera thought it was fantastic, and gave his blessing.

    • @papalaz4444244
      @papalaz4444244 Год назад +1

      @@joeday4293 yup - it's a really good adaption

    • @hubbsllc
      @hubbsllc Год назад +1

      Calling it an "adaptation" is kind of a stretch. I didn't realize it for years until I heard the actual Ginastera but "Toccata" is very much an original piece that uses some motifs from the Ginastera. ELP's "Fanfare," "Canario," and especially "Romeo And Juliet" are more like adaptations in the usual sense. Amazing piece of work.

  • @papalaz4444244
    @papalaz4444244 Год назад +29

    Carl had electronic triggers put on his kit and was setting off the electronic noises in the middle. He was well ahead of the game.

    • @cybore213
      @cybore213 Год назад +5

      They were actually triggered by microphones inside various drums in his kit. A precursor to electronic and midi triggers.

    • @stpnwlf9
      @stpnwlf9 Год назад +7

      Somewhere there in the 70s he started using that custom drum kit made of stainless steel with mag pickups that plugged straight into the drum riser. Thing weighed so much it collapsed the stage at the New Haven Yale Bowl. The drum set was later bought at auction by Ringo Starr.

    • @ghanus2009
      @ghanus2009 Год назад

      @@cybore213 That is right. He led the way! That kit still exists in Florida.

    • @Electrohedron
      @Electrohedron Год назад

      I wish someone could show what sounds were triggered by Carl. There is a lot of different synth sounds going on near the end.

    • @coachhannah2403
      @coachhannah2403 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Electrohedron- That was all Carl for a couple minutes.

  • @pariaheep
    @pariaheep Год назад +5

    This music is literally a prelude to the final scene of "Alien". Mind you, they had Giger making the cover of this album, who was also instrumental to the look and feel of the movie.
    Thanks for the greatest, most astonishing, flabbergasting live performances I ever had the chance to witness, guys!

  • @mikebunner3498
    @mikebunner3498 Год назад +4

    Once again, you have reviewed a band I got to see back in the day. As I did with Black Sabbath. I guess I got to see some killer bands. I am blessed! ELP was one of those bands that was so good it was like listening to the album. High energy combined with brilliant skills. Each member of the group was a master of their instruments. Very creative and innovating. No one else sounded like ELP. Super talent!!! Great showmanship. Not a single dull moment in their shows. NONE!

  • @somebloke13
    @somebloke13 Год назад +6

    Emerson, Lake, and Palmer.
    "How many people in this group?"
    9 mate 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @lphilpot01
      @lphilpot01 Год назад

      Just enough and no more. 🙂

    • @somebloke13
      @somebloke13 Год назад

      @@lphilpot01 Word 👍😎🙏

  • @davidmckenzie420
    @davidmckenzie420 Год назад +11

    As I'm sure other commenters have said, you've only scratched the surface on the amazing ELP. But if you want to hear another Carl Palmer song--and one he co-wrote--try Tank. This was one of the songs used for the original "Lazerium" planetarium light-show performances. (Saw it twice. I also saw ELP twice in their prime.) Otherwise, any of their major "albums" will do. How about Tarkus?

  • @grouchomagic
    @grouchomagic Год назад +3

    I saw them several times, and yep, just 3 blokes doing it all.

  • @jeddawkins7030
    @jeddawkins7030 Год назад +5

    You may have heard "Fanfare for the Common Man" and "I Believe in Father Christmas" without knowing who played them. "Lucky man " was also one of their best known songs.

  • @fractaljack210
    @fractaljack210 Год назад +35

    Fantastic band, fantastic drummer, they're all astounding. There are too many pieces of their music to recommend....Tarkus, side one, perhaps.

    • @joeday4293
      @joeday4293 Год назад +6

      Nah. The definitive version of "Tarkus" is the live one from "Welcome Back My Friends." Absolutely stunning.

    • @robinbishop468
      @robinbishop468 Год назад +3

      @@joeday4293 love Tarkus, check out Colleseums Valentine suite, equally brilliant

    • @nightwishlover8913
      @nightwishlover8913 Год назад +1

      @@robinbishop468 Colosseum were AWESOME - Jon Hiseman was a BEAST!

    • @stephencrawford6082
      @stephencrawford6082 Год назад +3

      @@joeday4293 Aquatarkus live is the pinnacle of ELP for me. Jaw dropping and pants filling excitement and sound. All three of them really beast it out for want of a better expression. Although the subject here is Palmer who I love, Emerson was God.

    • @joeday4293
      @joeday4293 Год назад +6

      @@stephencrawford6082 Keith Emerson was the very finest keyboardist in the history of rock music. Period. Not open to discussion. One of my absolute heroes. A god in my personal musical pantheon. He was an *assassin.* A goddamn *Jedi* of the keys.

  • @helenlig323
    @helenlig323 Год назад +6

    Back in the day, for those of us heady-types, put on the headphones, smoke a joint, sit back and duck out. I also listened to a lot of YES (“Roundabout”). It concerns me that young folks haven’t developed the attention span for so much great older music. Not even prog rock, which will never be everyone’s cup of tea, but just good music. Thanks!

  • @FusedAndLovingIt
    @FusedAndLovingIt Год назад +8

    Probably worth checking out a Live performance too. Carl is also playing many of the rhythmic synthesizer sounds too using one of the earliest prototype drum triggers.

    • @FusedAndLovingIt
      @FusedAndLovingIt Год назад +1

      Here is another 11min drum solo ruclips.net/video/3lcQaTl0YTc/видео.html that might give you an idea why Buddy Rich spoke well of him.

    • @cybore213
      @cybore213 Год назад

      @@FusedAndLovingIt if you're going listen to that solo, you might as well hear the entire piece. Search for "rondo live in Zurich 1970" and choose the video that is 18:11 long. It's only about 7 minutes longer, and you get to see all of Keith's antics on the Hammond in addition to Carl's fantastic solo.

  • @robertglisson6319
    @robertglisson6319 Год назад +24

    Andrew, absolutely no slight against you at all, but this is why Emerson, Lake and Palmer isn't as famous as they should be. They pretty much created whole swaths of rock that has been endlessly emulated in one version or another. What they created influenced the Who, Led Zeppelin, and countless other bands when they went through their "progressive" stage in the early to mid seventies. Yes, they were often over the top, like here in Toccata, but they were massively influential. That they weren't inducted into the RRHoF decades ago is simply a crime brought about by the snobbishness of those who see themselves as the arbiters and gatekeepers of "rock and roll."
    Not just a fan. I saw ELP, Yes, Floyd, Purple, Zep and the Who in their PRIME. They all knew who ELP was, and they all respected them...

    • @lorraine6848
      @lorraine6848 Год назад

      Go out and purchase all their albums! Words can not describe how Great they and their music IS ! You have to hear it.
      Keith Emerson & Greg Lake both passing in 2016 way tooo soon..Leaving Carl Palmer to carry on in Tribute of ELP !
      Carl's tribute band is fantastic! Eliminating Keith's keyboards and using a guitar in place.
      Carl is a must see when he picks up his tour again in 2023!

  • @stpnwlf9
    @stpnwlf9 Год назад +6

    Don't know exactly how involved the production was, but I do know the three of them played this piece live with very little drop-off from the studio version. They were extraordinarily precise as a live trio and never added additional musicians.

  • @triadmad
    @triadmad Год назад +4

    I saw them in concert at the end of January 1978. Going into the show, I knew nothing about them. After the show, I scampered to a record store and bought their live, "Welcome Back My Friends to the Show that Never Ends" album. The live renditions of Tocatta, Tarkus, and Karn Evil blow away the studio versions.

  • @wardka
    @wardka Год назад +5

    I'm a little late to the party but I'm shocked no one seems to mention in the comments that the middle section, that sounds kind of like an arcade game with a lot of noises and drums, is actually a drum solo, each drum triggering a different synth patch. Palmer had (or maybe helped create) a sort of proto electronic drum kit. There is a great video somewhere on RUclips of him demonstrating it live.

  • @eduardosorrentino9464
    @eduardosorrentino9464 Год назад +5

    You really open a new rabbit hole, my friend! To understand that piece, it's a adaptation of a piano concerto.... and you have to listen the hole album! I'm very sure that you gonna like it a lot!!

  • @jamessummerlin9516
    @jamessummerlin9516 4 месяца назад

    One of my all time favorite 3 piece groups. Seen them do this live, 3 musicians, no loops, backing tracks, or overdubs.

  • @cslloyd1
    @cslloyd1 Год назад +6

    You don’t need coffee if you have Toccata
    When this ended I was really hankering for “Still you turn me on”. Incredible contrast
    If you want to really hear Palmer bust a move, play “Tank”

  • @Narpets2112
    @Narpets2112 Год назад +2

    Three guys with minimal overdubs. They wrote and arranged their material with the intention of playing it live.

  • @alekhidell
    @alekhidell Год назад +5

    A true supergroup, sadly only Carl still with us. I got into ELP aged 13 thanks to my school music teacher who was infatuated with them and for the lesson just played an ELP album each week for a month or so. This album has to be heard in its entirety, as with most of their albums. This is one of the earliest concept albums. There’s a sensational video of Carl’s solo at the California Jam in 74. Blurringly fast.

  • @docschweitz7606
    @docschweitz7606 7 месяцев назад +3

    Carl Palmer was NOT "Drummer", or Just played drums in a band. Carl Palmer was A PURE ATHLETE who played the drums. Strongest and most Fit Athlete who was a percussionist of Perfection. Mind boggling in person.

  • @voiceover2191
    @voiceover2191 Год назад +2

    There's 3 people in the band and yes, they played this live and nothing was left out. Also there's the first use of programmed percussion in music in it and Carl Palmer did it all himself (it's the part right after the timpani solo and creepy piano) And no the gongs with the timpani solo are not overdubbed, he played them at the same time, there's a live concert that proves that he did it (while the drum kit on stage was spinning round)

  • @domioele3346
    @domioele3346 9 месяцев назад +1

    There's a video somewhere of Carl Palmer playing the middle section of this. It illustrates how he triggers the synthesizers.

  • @kevinkilduff2064
    @kevinkilduff2064 2 месяца назад +3

    The keyboard sounds dated because Keith was using a relatively new technology in the Moog synthesizer. My gosh, ELP were 25 years ahead of their time! Carl Palmer is easily one of the greatest technical and creative percussionists of the rock era, and in his 70s he is still at it!

  • @MiloJonesKidd
    @MiloJonesKidd 4 дня назад

    This song is introduced on the ELP Live triple album as “featuring Carl on his synthesized percussion”. I always wondered what “synthesized percussion” meant. The live performance of this song had Carl and the drum platform elevated about 15 ft in the air “spinning” around.

  • @philburton2831
    @philburton2831 10 месяцев назад +1

    Carl Palmer uses a drum synth on this track, it was always believed that it was Keith Emerson on his Moog Synthesiser but it was mainly Carl!!

  • @darrylbennett4297
    @darrylbennett4297 Год назад +2

    Dude
    This is a hell of a rabbit hole to venture into. Carl Palmer is fantastic, check out some live stuff he’s really fun

  • @rtd12
    @rtd12 Год назад +1

    It's a rabbit hole worth going down. Great stuff

  • @rickcook7308
    @rickcook7308 Год назад +7

    Definitely a trio. Keith Emerson was a monster on keyboards.

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Год назад

      Unbelievable

    • @rickcook7308
      @rickcook7308 Год назад +2

      In the mid-late 80s I Saw Carl Palmer do a standing snare drum only solo at the first modern drummer drumfest I attended. He wasn’t listed as a participant so we were pleasantly surprised to see him. He was introduced by Joe morello who said “he just flew in from London and his arms aren’t even tired “his snare drum technique was incredible and they later gave away the snare to a lucky ticket holder

    • @cybore213
      @cybore213 Год назад +2

      @@AndrewRooneyDrums And they could play this live and sound just as good or better than the studio version! Check out the version from their live triple album "Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends"

  • @ronniefarnsworth6465
    @ronniefarnsworth6465 Год назад +5

    Brain Salad Surgery (ELP) one Classic Progs "Greatest" albums Andrew !!!

  • @WishForTheNight
    @WishForTheNight Год назад +3

    Yes Keith Emmerson (synths), Greg Lake (bass, guitar, vocals) and Carl Palmer (drums, percussion) now première starts omg can't wait! One of the greatest prog drummers and percussionists. Too bad his genius is underrated. This is something i found Andrew: This is the first rock song to use electronic drums. With the help of an electronics expert the group had on hand, Carl Palmer created a system where his drum kit would trigger programmed sounds. "In the middle you hear all these atmospheric preprogrammed sort of keyboard sounds," he said in his Songfacts interview. "But they're actually all being triggered by the drums with a mitigator on the floor where I could have an octave divided, change the sound up or down to each individual sound. And there were roughly eight of them. So those eight, 16, probably 24 sounds, the same sound, up the octave and down the octave.
    So that was my first and my main sort of contribution, really. It never got picked up on because it was so far left - it was so far in front that people thought they were keyboard sounds. So we didn't really bother in explaining that, No, they're not. We just let it go, because we were just after creating new sounds and things.

  • @Liz.Green789
    @Liz.Green789 Год назад

    Welcome to class. Start at the beginning and go on a wild journey of ups and downs and amazing talent. Brain Salad Surgery was my first ELP album a zillion years ago. Remarkable musicianship and talent. Greg Lake has the most beautiful voice.

  • @magirusdeutzjupiter2234
    @magirusdeutzjupiter2234 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks so much. To me CP is a drum perfectionist .

  • @alanfine9825
    @alanfine9825 Год назад

    Saw them in Concert in Chicago around '76...Just Awesome Live....check out Tarkus/side 1...still one of my FAV'S!

  • @user-pd4uq7sh9c
    @user-pd4uq7sh9c Год назад +1

    never any over dubs just three of the best ever seen them many many times in the 70;s

  • @thomasmacdonald3719
    @thomasmacdonald3719 10 месяцев назад +2

    Carl Palmer is without question the GOAT drummer.

  • @NewBritainStation
    @NewBritainStation Год назад +5

    Here’s the drum solo portion live in the studio:
    ruclips.net/video/3mjSjD8WRqo/видео.html
    Note the drum triggered synths.
    And here’s ELP performing the entire piece live:
    m.ruclips.net/video/MgaETQh4uXg/видео.html

  • @shadowlandstudios86
    @shadowlandstudios86 Год назад +9

    Toccata is definitely one of their more ‘out there’ pieces. I would highly recommend you check out Karn Evil #9 1st impression part 2.

    • @johnloupis2347
      @johnloupis2347 Год назад +4

      1, 2 and 3 to hear the whole story :)

    • @paulcwyuen
      @paulcwyuen Год назад +3

      And Tarkus!

    • @damirhlobik6488
      @damirhlobik6488 Год назад

      Toccata is the best when you want to introduce someone to ELP 🙂

    • @ghanus2009
      @ghanus2009 Год назад +1

      In the 80s I put my Electrostatic headphones on a lady I was dating and put on Toccata. The headphones came off pretty quick. It was too much. I used the term "was dating" , right?

    • @damirhlobik6488
      @damirhlobik6488 Год назад

      @@ghanus2009 Very strange 🙂

  • @markdevant32
    @markdevant32 Год назад +1

    you need to see this on video to truly understand their skill and genius.

  • @socalltd
    @socalltd Год назад +2

    Someone wrote that Brain Salad Surgery was a Sci-Fi soundtrack to a movie that does not exist
    So many layers where the band shine in the LP and is considered the go to album for getting into
    ELP. All this was done live in a massive 10-month world tour for the album from Nov '73 to Aug '74.

  • @Less1leg2
    @Less1leg2 6 месяцев назад

    As a kid, back in the 1970's there was a documentary done on the members of ELP. Basically, all three members were taking Classical Music Lessons and improving on their playing techniques. It was fascinating that these guys all great musicians were honing their skills even more.
    Now Carl Palmer, was doing something more interesting. He was learning improved techniques from what I was hearing. adjusting his striking of drums to reduce damage on this wrists. Interesting, his long time method of being a drummer was causing "repetitive injury fatigue". The Drum Teacher was showing him more or less how to avoid or reduce this injury.

  • @bellbrass
    @bellbrass Год назад +3

    The gongs were not overdubbed - he did it exactly the same way live. And he was using mallets.

  • @justingoulet9714
    @justingoulet9714 Год назад +9

    One of most iconic prog albums of all time Karn Evil 9 totally unique

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Год назад

      I'm intrigued Justin

    • @cybore213
      @cybore213 Год назад +3

      @@AndrewRooneyDrums Karn Evil 9, 28 plus minutes of some of the greatest music you will ever experience. Then there's the 35 minute version from their live triple album "Welcome Back My Friends to the Show That Never Ends". I still have my original vinyl version that I bought way back in 1974. The cover and record sleeves are pretty beat up, but the vinyl is still in pretty good condition.

    • @damirhlobik6488
      @damirhlobik6488 Год назад +1

      Not one of the most, THE MOST

    • @dadano48
      @dadano48 Год назад +1

      Yeah !! A master piece !! Wonderful !!

  • @devonvergiels5185
    @devonvergiels5185 8 месяцев назад

    First, Whaaaa?!?! Never heard of ELP??? Wow
    All Carl. Have seen them together 3 times, actually my first ever live show. Saw Carl's ELP Welcome Back My Friends show tonight with his very talented Paul and Simon. At 73 years of age he is still stinking amazing. Definitely bittersweet with Carl the one left. But so glad he's keeping the legacy alive.
    There was a brief time (way long time ago) when ELP traveled with a large orchestra to support the whole huge, massive, wonderful thing.
    Keith had multiple keyboards, some he rode on revolving gimble, some he attacked with knives (thereby keeping keys down) and tossed around and kind of killed.
    Carl, well, he should have had about 6 arms. Massive setup, crazy talent. Over 50 years of fantastic things to listen to.

  • @garygomesvedicastrology
    @garygomesvedicastrology Месяц назад

    This was an adaption of an orchestral piece by a composer from Argentina, Alberto Ginastera! He loved ELP's adaption of the piece. The toggle switch you are referring to is the pitch wheel, which is still in use on most modern synths, but used a bit differently. If there were any overdubs on this piece, they were extremely minimal. I saw him live and the gong rolls are done in real time, even now. The piano sound you are referring to is Carl Palmer on tubular bells. This may have been one of the first recordings in which drums were used to trigger synthesizers.

  • @christopherwebb4859
    @christopherwebb4859 Год назад +1

    I’ve listened to them for years since I was a kid and it was not until last night that I found out that the wacky sounds in the middle are part of a synthesized drum kit. One of the first efforts at an electronic drum set. So ground-breaking.

  • @johndrx165
    @johndrx165 Год назад +1

    Watch it live from California Jam 1974. My first concert that same year.

  • @JurgenStrauss-ow2ge
    @JurgenStrauss-ow2ge 11 месяцев назад +1

    I have seen ELP 4 times in the 70s , 80s and 90s and Carl with his own band 2 times in the 2000s . Sometimes he had even church bells over his drums set . He is a powerhouse and magician !

  • @gajolley
    @gajolley Год назад +2

    ELP is always in my top 5. I had their Brain Salad Album when it came out. Incredible, hypnotizing and some of the best progressive rock ever composed. Try Trilogy from the album of the same name for more Palmer incredible machine-like playing.

  • @davidp.5598
    @davidp.5598 8 месяцев назад

    They were a band that played their best. LIVE!

  • @nrsvlda70
    @nrsvlda70 Год назад +1

    Just checked out a video of them playing this… which I’m assuming you might watch as well. Palmer was standing between two huge gongs while playing the temp, with a xylophone in front of him. Interesting… very interesting (and loud)!! I remember some of their stuff from ‘back in the day’, but I’d never heard this. Thanks for your analysis, and for sharing!

  • @backpack441
    @backpack441 Год назад +3

    My friend went thru a pile of albums in his room , pulled out BSS and said I would probably like this. It was in 1973 and I did like the album. Iliked reading thru the gear they used and they called Palmer's gear "percussion" . I felt they gave us potsmokers a more "intelligent" platform to work from.The inside album photos of them looked like they were well read, Maybe , I might have not have ever came acroos them, if not for my friend showing me the record.

  • @stephencrawford6082
    @stephencrawford6082 Год назад +2

    Surprising that someone who teaches drums has never heard Carl Palmer play. The sound these 3 guys could make live beggars belief. Virtuoso musicians who paved the way for many of the sounds we take for granted today.

    • @hubbsllc
      @hubbsllc Год назад

      That happens a lot on YT "reaction" videos by "teachers" and (ahem) "classical composers." Oftentimes there's no idea who the major dudes were/are or the genre or instruments involved.

  • @yodenman
    @yodenman 5 месяцев назад

    Along with Yes, ELP are incredible musicians and the best compliment I can pay them is to say that there are few if any tribute bands out there. They are unique and no immitations are even close.

  • @donnelson6694
    @donnelson6694 Год назад +3

    I remember listening to a lot of ELP back in the day but this piece always gave me the creeps(my anxiety probably didn't help lol).

    • @johnloupis2347
      @johnloupis2347 Год назад +1

      Haha... Like I said, it's dark like a lot of the album :)

  • @justingoulet9714
    @justingoulet9714 Год назад +1

    I saw Emerson Lake and Palmer at California Jam also on the Bill was Black Sabbath Deep Purple and a young Tommy Aldridge with Black Oak Arkansas l was 16 at the time

  • @edleland483
    @edleland483 Год назад

    In the 70's and 80s, a TV station in Boston used a portion of this to cue in "Creature Double Feature"...B-reel Japanese monster movies like Godzilla vs. Mothra...great memories

  • @Redandranger
    @Redandranger Год назад

    Emerson, Lake and Palmer were a great way of exposing young people (like me) to classical music pieces. I ended up having the organist play some classical at our wedding ..... stuff I had heard first through ELP. Jerusalem, Promenade, Fanfare for the Common Man

  • @duanefalk219
    @duanefalk219 9 месяцев назад +2

    Watch a live video man! Youll see the three of then play exactly this- no overdubbing no auto tuning, just incredible musicians

  • @greenbeatsred
    @greenbeatsred Год назад +1

    There’s live footage of Carl Palmer and the band playing this piece right here on RUclips. They had some really excellent hit songs like “Lucky Man”, “From the Beginning “, and “Karnevil 9”.

  • @fernandohhup
    @fernandohhup Год назад +2

    Never heard about ELP before???? Unbelieved

  • @kurtsandstrom5716
    @kurtsandstrom5716 7 месяцев назад +1

    Ninety percent of that breakdown was all carl palmer. He was a visionary. Those are electronically Triggered wheat loops. Synthesized drums at a time when nobody even knew what a synthesizer was.

  • @peterdoe2617
    @peterdoe2617 Год назад +5

    best album from them in my book is still "pictures at an exhibition." Finishing that one with "Nutrocker" was evem more brilliant. But: Toccata? Honestly? )Even at my age )62 in a few days:
    To seriously listen to that, you need to smoke the really good stuff!
    Here is my cute little story (hint: please listen to it!!). We once burned down the 2x 100W (sinus) amplifier of a friend at 4am,
    listening to the german "Krautrock" band Grobschnitt. And their song "solar music".
    We might have had a few? I don't recall. ROFLMAO!
    Even a seriously beautiful song to listen to, actually. Have fun!
    Greetings from the far north of Germany!

  • @Greg-om2hb
    @Greg-om2hb Год назад +5

    Watch a concert video to see how they make the magic. Emerson commands a enormous bank of analog synthesizer modules interconnected by a rat’s next of patch cords that’s amazing to behold. Every sound is hand crafted.
    Still You Turn Me On and Karn Evil no. 9, from the same album, were AOR radio hits in the mid-70s. Lucky Man and From The Beginning, a ballad, were radio hits before that.
    YT has a great interview with ELP on their musical influences here - ruclips.net/video/cSamxxqdPs8/видео.html

  • @paulcwyuen
    @paulcwyuen Год назад

    Been a fan of ELP since mid 80s and still one of my all time favorite. You should hear their live version of Toccata, super cool!!!

  • @kurtsandstrom5716
    @kurtsandstrom5716 7 месяцев назад +2

    Carl Palmer invented the Idea of synthesized drum triggers. 😮 He was the first person to actually come up with the hardware.

    • @panurge987
      @panurge987 Месяц назад

      They weren't triggers like what we think of as triggers today (piezo), but actually just microphones that triggered the synthesizers.

  • @cheneyrobert
    @cheneyrobert Год назад +1

    Saw ELP in 72 and 73 and they were amazing live 👏👏👏thanks for the video 😎🥂all three were top notch musicians 🎶 Emerson was a master organist so all four limbs are working….he could fill in so many spaces and move so many directions….Palmer was a perfect compliment to the band 🥂

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Год назад +1

      Great to hear your experience with them Robert

    • @cheneyrobert
      @cheneyrobert Год назад

      @@AndrewRooneyDrums apparently Mitch Mitchell and Jimi were considered for the band, but Jimi died and they brought Carl in. The documentary on the band covers it all….very interesting documentary if you’re interested.

  • @archdrum
    @archdrum 6 месяцев назад

    Absolutely loved ELP and had the privilege to see them in concert many times.I spent the Summer of 74 with metal practice sticks on a wood plank on my Moms dining room table playing this album and practicing double stroke and paradiddles. 50 years later I can walk the dog and pretty much play the entire album in my head! RIP Greg Lake + Keith Emerson.

  • @fjborg6978
    @fjborg6978 24 дня назад

    If you really want to get the full Carl Palmer experience check out their live performance at Roosevelt Stadium in Jersey City in 1974. It is a rough recording but the raw energy of Palmer is on full display. It is an audio only "video" and it is over 2 hours long. The tracks are annotated so you can pick what you want to hear but I suggest the Karn Evil 9 tracks if you really want to hear Carl relentlessly murder his kit. Extraordinary quad concert I was privileged to attend.

  • @tinicum54
    @tinicum54 8 месяцев назад

    I saw them Live in November, 1971. Philadelphia, Pa. Yes opened, $5.00 ticket.

  • @doyasteve
    @doyasteve 2 месяца назад +1

    Synth keyboards were stat of the art for the time. In fact, they were developed by Bob Moog. Nothing wrong with dating a piece--just like reading a book or seeing a picture from a particular school or time frame.

  • @jgdmlw
    @jgdmlw Год назад +11

    As Justin said, they did this live. No overdubs. The live version on Welcome Back My Friends is stunning. I wish they had video tapped that concert. No one ever mentions The Enemy God Dances with the Black Spirits from the Works Live album. More mind blowing drumming and it is just the three of them. No overdubs.

    • @AndrewRooneyDrums
      @AndrewRooneyDrums  Год назад +1

      That's absolutely mad Michael!

    • @FrancescoDeBiasi
      @FrancescoDeBiasi Год назад +3

      @@AndrewRooneyDrums Yeah Man, if you listen to the "Welcome Back etc." album you go crazy. It's like there were three octopuses on the stage, very little missing parts compared to the studio versions. And they play almost every song FASTER

  • @hubbsllc
    @hubbsllc Год назад +2

    7:30 Carl Palmer did this bit live pretty much exactly like you hear it here, timp mallet in one hand, gong beater in the other. 11:46 More of the same; on the WELCOME BACK album, Palmer plays this live. There are some overdubs in this studio version but ELP conceived this as a live piece and the perc synth business sounds incredible with the live hall ambience. 14:33 You really, really need to listen through the entire WELCOME BACK album - dare I say, especially if you claim to be a drum teacher because that album is one powerful lesson (it was basically what taught *me*).

  • @donkunes8630
    @donkunes8630 Год назад

    they did create a few songs that had radio play , Lucky Man, From the Beginning, Still you turn Me On, Take a Pebble

  • @randymartin2165
    @randymartin2165 Год назад

    Check out Trilogy, Tarkus, Works.... Seeing them do this live was amazing - 3 guys, 3 extremely talented guys do all live! Welcome back my friends..... :-0