When Keith first bought that Hammond organ, he wrote the company asking how he'd be able to produce certain sounds. They wrote him back sayiing that it was impossible. Shortly thereafter he sent them a tape of him doing the impossible.😁
Saw the Nice in my formative years when they were resident at the Marquee in Wardour Street, they had Guitarist David O.List in the band who filled in for the Floyd when Syd was having problems, but Emerson squeezed him out I actually preferred the Nice to ELP, but they were all brilliant musicians! but Karelia suite by the Nice had some brilliant sounds by Emerson
Wayyyy late to the party here, but I'm a super big ELP fan and pianist, and IMHO I recommend reacting to 2nd Impression for the ultimate demonstration of mind-blowing piano proficiency. Technically amazing, and crosses a variety of piano genres in one piece. Far more likely to impress the classically trained pianist than some of the full blown prog rock ELP masterpieces (i.e. 1st or 3rd impressions or Tarkus - masterworks though they be ;). Thanks for reacting to this! Keep up the good work!
Hello. I just binged watched a load of your stuff. Love it. Kel listens like a serious musician...I watch her eyes and see her brain working. I saw ELP live 50 years ago when I was 18....can you imagine? I discoverd some new music recently...brought me back to life. The most joyous music that I ever heard. Band - Maid. Keep up the good work.
I did not know how Keith died until you mentioned that. So I Wiki'd it and found he died by self-inflicted gunshot to the head. Apparently he was suffering from depression (alcohol was possibly a factor) and nerve damage that affected his playing. He was very worried that his affliction would spoil the music and disappoint his fans. Damn that's hardcore. A professional who felt he couldn't go on without his talent being perfect, in his mind, in his ear. Realizing that he probably could not, well we see where that led. So sad.
Haha, your wife face was a picture. That was always ELPs show ender and it always bought the house down. Keith Emerson absolutely brilliant showman, brilliant musician. That old Hammond L100 sure went through it and why not, was an exciting show ender to a brilliant concert. I was lucky enough to see Keith Emerson in the Nice in the late 60s and ELP in the early 70s and to be honest there was no other music like that back then. Still a shame the not in the rock and roll hall of fame for being one of the best bands in the world, I've listened to lots of Prog bands over the years and enjoyed certain tracks, with ELP I enjoyed all the tracks with the exception of love beach and in the hot seat. Keith and Greg rest in peace and thanks for for all your great music. I doubt if we will ever see a band like that again 👌
That organ was reinforced with metal plates to prevent it from breaking by the roadies The daggers were genuine SS ceremonial daggers. Given to him by Lemmy He has actually broken his ribs by putting the organ onto himself because of the weight.
The problem was the roadies reinforced the organ because it was hell fixing it after Emerson beat it up. They added a lot of weight. Unfortunately Keith was unaware. He dropped it on himself the first time breaking his ribs. He also couldn't extricate himself. They had to lift it off him.
The video only captures a fraction of what the atmosphere was like seeing them live in person. Watching Keith Emerson doing what you saw him do in this video except with two separate keyboards, one on each side of him, as he was running his hands up and down each keyboard at the same time was something I will never forget. RIP Keith and Greg!
Amazing reaction Kel-n-Rich,.....Keith Emerson is arguably the greatest keyboardist of the 20th century.Keith is a genius.He can play 5 keyboards at the same time.They were having fun hear.Must watch him playing more serious,..like in Karn evil # 9,... Impression 1-3.He makes it look really easy.They were way ahead of their time.Thank you for the great reaction.!!!!!!!!
Soooo funny. I was going to write and say I remember in one concert where Keith played the piano upside down and backward and he did it in this concert!! So darned talented. PLEASE listen to more ELP!!!!
Once again I'm enjoying Kel's reactions. So often classically trained musicians don't learn to to embrace a wilder side. They get taught to conform, abide by old tropes, and just play the notes. Rock and roll is born out to the blues (where emotion is the foundation), jazz (where spirit of the group is the driver), and folk (culture). As groups like ELP came into the forefront, classical motifs are taken out of their tight rules and the results are wonderful, just like Kel's face while she watches and listens.
Thanks for taking me along on your trip through music. In the late 60's early to mid 70's I immersed myself in rock and folk music, but then got married, had kids and got busy with life, now kids are gone I am recapturing that love I had for it.. Thank you again, very much, enjoy listening with you!
Love ELP. Keith Emerson was one hell of a keyboardist, but the rhythm section Greg Lake (bass, guitar, vocals) and Carl Palmer (drums, percussion) is just as awesome. Unfortunately you didn't see Keith stabbing knives into his Hammond organ 😀 Kel might like #Rainbow Difficult to cure (Beethoven's Ninth Symphony) live at Budokan 1984 🇫🇮 It's so much fun to watch, and yes, there's an orchestra playing with them.
Yes, Bach Bethoven Mozart and Mussorgskij were real Rockers. Try the Pictures at an exhibition Concert (Mussorgskij) donne by this 3 Guys. You will love it.^^
I grew up going to the symphony and playing cello. Pablo Casals was my idol. I think 'Pictures' is one of the greatest of all classical compositions, written for a friend who died.
In the 70's I was a teenager at a buddy's house his older brother that had a German reel to reel player and listening to ELO on his head phones was mind blowing good
Nothing like a little "Emerson" to get you going in the morning. Damn, I miss him ! IMHO, he was THE best keyboardist EVER on this planet !!! RIP "Fingers" !
I saw that same concert in Houston in 1970 at the Music Hall. 45 years later I saw Keith Emerson and Greg Lake at the Verizon Theatre in Houston. What an amazing talent.
I love your channel, i enjoy the music, but i enjoy watching the love you guy's have for one another, just watching you two puts a smile on my face, and oh yeah please do some gnr thanks
I was introduced to ELP by my brother who was 5 years older than me and that was early into my teens when I first heard them after my brother Paul went to the Isle of White pop festival and saw ELP there. I can remember at some point seeing a brief video in a program about ELP on UK television some years ago that showed Keith Emerson playing a grand piano, nothing spectacular I hear you saying, but he was strapped to the piano stool which was connected to the piano and the whole thing was spinning around. He was playing a classical piece perfectly as he spun around with the axis being in the middle so that he himself was going up and down around the connecting pole. His suicide was a sad loss to music and his talent is greatly missed.
@@carty43 Wow, It's been way too long since I've listened to that album. Through the years, I've thought of the trickiest pieces Emerson did on piano, and thought of "Trilogy" as nice, but nothing on the order of 2nd Impression or the solo portion of Three Fates. The trio section of the Three Fates doesn't seem that complicated, but is definitely NOT nice. Three Fates would definitely not be good for a reaction, becaise the organ solo would lose a RUclips audience in a heartbeat.
#EmersonLakeandPowell, The Score, England, The whole Emerson, Lake and Powell album reminds me of the things my Grandad used to tell me about his time in the Army during WW2.
I was at their first gig, the Isle of Whight. I knew Emerson from The Nice “ America”, which Bernstein said he liked. ELP aroused an interest in classical music in me and many others.
Gratulations Kel, you are on the right way to free your mind. That‘s the reward for being open to new experiences. BTW I i’d love to see your reaction to Terry Kath‘s „Free Form Guitar“, live version.
For me, my favourite ELP album is 'Pictures at an Exhibition' , It is a recording of the band's arrangement of Pictures at an Exhibition by Modest Mussorgsky, performed at Newcastle City Hall on 26 March 1971. Cheers!
The look on Kel's face is priceless as Keith thrashes his keyboards around she looks horrified. Keith Emerson was the ultimate showman and sadly missed.
I saw ELP do a variation of Rondo live in 1973 in Glasgow. It was an astonishing sight seeing Keith Emerson lying on his back with an organ on his chest as he played the keyboard upside down, with the aid of knives at one point - just for added sprinkles. You're right that it wasn't musically flawless, but it should be acknowledged that Keith could have played Bach note-perfect if he had wanted to. Much as I like Bach's music, I'm so glad he didn't want to.
Hey, Keith was a show-off, and loved volume, but was a jazzer at heart. He loved to solo, and cramming a recognizable melody in between all the Futurist noise-making and organ abuse was one of his little tricks. Improvisation is your musical soul laid bare. x
Flashback to my teen years. Great group that during its time produced a sound that blew people’s minds. Strong classical roots to these guys. Don’t forget this was the age of experimental drugs!
Keith followed the tradition of "musikalische spass" (musical jokes) of Mozart, for example playing lying down under the organ. Keith in concert with his former band The Nice, whilst playing Rondo, once jumped over the organ and ended up down in the audience, he was approached by a guard asking: "who are you, where did you come from?" Keith replied: "I am in the band, you better let me up so we can finish the concert". ;) Keith was also a masterful composer, his piano pieces are in the great romantic tradition. You should do a reaction to The Endless Enigma or Take a Pebble.
The sound at the very beginning was the Hammond's (L-100 model) amplifier being over driven, otherwise known as "crunch." The crashing sound when he rocks the organ is produced by the springs in the reverb box banging against the case and each other. Watch a tape of Carl Palmer on the drums. Can't even describe what he does on the drumset.
I'm ignorant about ELP and seeing this makes me want to watch more live performances. Please react to some more and I'd love to learn and grow with you.
Rondo was always the encore at ELP concerts, Keith's Hammond L100 was modified to take the punishment, the crashing sound was the reverb in the back of the organ and by switching it on and off gave the rise and fall effect plus other effects like using feedback, this could only be done with the Hammond spinet tone wheel generator series, of course other effects were added, it was part of the stage show, people loved to see it and it gave keith a chance to let ripp and Express himself, keith was a brilliant musician, innovator, exciting to listen to and watch. Helps music was complex, but exciting. I doubt weather we will hear or see anything like this again, yes people can play the music, but when ELP played live they created such excitement and atmosphere. Keith was a brilliant at improvisation and using, jazz, classical, folk, blues and rock influences made the band so different. I saw keith in the Nice in the late 60s and ELP in the 70s here in the UK, for me it was the most exciting music I'd ever heard, I still get a big kick out of it now and I'm in my late 60s, play Trilogy. You will enjoy it.
#FOGHAT "Slow Ride" & "Fool For The City" Please, Please, Please, play FOGHAT. Kel will love them. Rich, I know you must've listened to them at some point. You won't regret it. Like the URIAH HEEP video you guys did this FOGHAT two'fer will again... impress you two. KEEP KISSING! Peace! :)
Nice reaction! The horror on Kel's face as Keith wreaks havoc on that Hammond is priceless. But Kieth's showmanship goes back to 1967 when Jimi Hendrix exploded on the London music scene while Kieth was also first making a name for himself with the Nice (Pete Townshend was also smashing his guitars regularly), so the stage was already set for this sort of flamboyant showmanship in a rock setting. Kieth clearly decided that he needed to do something like that with his instrument. Re: his playing, you sort of have to leave your classical music standards at the door when appreciating Kieth Emerson's talent. Over the years he more than proved he had some of the most ferocious chops of any rock keyboard player, although he wanted more to be recognized as a composer (he kept trying to get Leonard Bernstein's approval.) As you see here, his playing style was pretty aggressive, which unfortunately led to him being mostly disabled in his right arm later in life (and other mental health issues followed from that.)
BTW: the Rondo theme is actually based on "Blue Rondo à la Turk" by the Dave Brubeck jazz group. Although the original was in 9/8, Emerson changed it to 4/4, a version Brubeck later said he can't play. lol
Imagine seeing them in a 15,000 seat coliseum with huge speakers in all four corners for quad sound. Once you hear #KarnEvil and #Hoedown , imagine that type of music being produced, getting played and being so widely popular today. 70’s!
You need to see the second half when he’s using daggers to hold down the keys! You also need to see the spinning piano from The California Jam in 1974!
When Keith first bought that Hammond organ, he wrote the company asking how he'd be able to produce certain sounds. They wrote him back sayiing that it was impossible. Shortly thereafter he sent them a tape of him doing the impossible.😁
Saw the Nice in my formative years when they were resident at the Marquee in Wardour Street, they had Guitarist David O.List in the band who filled in for the Floyd when Syd was having problems, but Emerson squeezed him out
I actually preferred the Nice to ELP, but they were all brilliant musicians!
but Karelia suite by the Nice had some brilliant sounds by Emerson
Wayyyy late to the party here, but I'm a super big ELP fan and pianist, and IMHO I recommend reacting to 2nd Impression for the ultimate demonstration of mind-blowing piano proficiency. Technically amazing, and crosses a variety of piano genres in one piece. Far more likely to impress the classically trained pianist than some of the full blown prog rock ELP masterpieces (i.e. 1st or 3rd impressions or Tarkus - masterworks though they be ;). Thanks for reacting to this! Keep up the good work!
I grew up on ELP. Welcome to one of the most creative bands of all time...
I am stunned you found a ELP song under 30 minutes! 😂. Fun reaction. 🤘🏻
Fanfare for the common man is also under 30 minutes
All their songs and every single one is under 30 minutes
@@obikari7721 Karn Evil 9 live is 35 minutes long. The studio version though is under 30 minutes at 29:40.
@@cybore213 Pictures at an Exhibition (Live at the Isle of Wight 1970) is also 35 minutes long 😉
Hello. I just binged watched a load of your stuff. Love it. Kel listens like a serious musician...I watch her eyes and see her brain working. I saw ELP live 50 years ago when I was 18....can you imagine?
I discoverd some new music recently...brought me back to life.
The most joyous music that I ever heard.
Band - Maid.
Keep up the good work.
I can't wait until you see him sticking knives into the keyboard to keep a note sustained when he doesn't have 15 fingers.
:P yeh, that will sit 'em on their asses!!!
Don’t forget the rolling piano, playing upside down! That and knife throwing will completely blow her mind.
Kel, welcome to ELP.
Keith and Greg were such loses, particularly the way Keith left us, so very sad.
I did not know how Keith died until you mentioned that. So I Wiki'd it and found he died by self-inflicted gunshot to the head. Apparently he was suffering from depression (alcohol was possibly a factor) and nerve damage that affected his playing. He was very worried that his affliction would spoil the music and disappoint his fans. Damn that's hardcore. A professional who felt he couldn't go on without his talent being perfect, in his mind, in his ear. Realizing that he probably could not, well we see where that led. So sad.
Haha, your wife face was a picture. That was always ELPs show ender and it always bought the house down. Keith Emerson absolutely brilliant showman, brilliant musician. That old Hammond L100 sure went through it and why not, was an exciting show ender to a brilliant concert. I was lucky enough to see Keith Emerson in the Nice in the late 60s and ELP in the early 70s and to be honest there was no other music like that back then. Still a shame the not in the rock and roll hall of fame for being one of the best bands in the world, I've listened to lots of Prog bands over the years and enjoyed certain tracks, with ELP I enjoyed all the tracks with the exception of love beach and in the hot seat. Keith and Greg rest in peace and thanks for for all your great music. I doubt if we will ever see a band like that again 👌
That organ was reinforced with metal plates to prevent it from breaking by the roadies
The daggers were genuine SS ceremonial daggers.
Given to him by Lemmy
He has actually broken his ribs by putting the organ onto himself because of the weight.
The problem was the roadies reinforced the organ because it was hell fixing it after Emerson beat it up. They added a lot of weight. Unfortunately Keith was unaware. He dropped it on himself the first time breaking his ribs. He also couldn't extricate himself. They had to lift it off him.
The video only captures a fraction of what the atmosphere was like seeing them live in person. Watching Keith Emerson doing what you saw him do in this video except with two separate keyboards, one on each side of him, as he was running his hands up and down each keyboard at the same time was something I will never forget. RIP Keith and Greg!
Amazing reaction Kel-n-Rich,.....Keith Emerson is arguably the greatest keyboardist of the 20th century.Keith is a genius.He can play 5 keyboards at the same time.They were having fun hear.Must watch him playing more serious,..like in Karn evil # 9,... Impression 1-3.He makes it look really easy.They were way ahead of their time.Thank you for the great reaction.!!!!!!!!
Soooo funny. I was going to write and say I remember in one concert where Keith played the piano upside down and backward and he did it in this concert!! So darned talented.
PLEASE listen to more ELP!!!!
Once again I'm enjoying Kel's reactions. So often classically trained musicians don't learn to to embrace a wilder side. They get taught to conform, abide by old tropes, and just play the notes. Rock and roll is born out to the blues (where emotion is the foundation), jazz (where spirit of the group is the driver), and folk (culture). As groups like ELP came into the forefront, classical motifs are taken out of their tight rules and the results are wonderful, just like Kel's face while she watches and listens.
That's a mild version of the Rondo 69 did when Emerson was in the group The Nice.
Keith is like a Mad Scientist on the keys. Brilliance comes in many forms.
Welcome to the show that never ends, so glad you could attend.. ELP!
You guys are great. Love watching you.
Thanks for taking me along on your trip through music.
In the late 60's early to mid 70's I immersed myself in rock and folk music, but then got married, had kids and got busy with life, now kids are gone I am recapturing that love I had for it.. Thank you again, very much, enjoy listening with you!
Great. More ELP please!
The late Keith Emerson was a keyboard genious.If it had keys Keith could play it Listen to Trilogy she will love the grand piano intro.😊
The greatest group ever. Hugely underrated.
Love ELP. Keith Emerson was one hell of a keyboardist, but the rhythm section Greg Lake (bass, guitar, vocals) and Carl Palmer (drums, percussion) is just as awesome. Unfortunately you didn't see Keith stabbing knives into his Hammond organ 😀
Kel might like #Rainbow Difficult to cure (Beethoven's Ninth Symphony) live at Budokan 1984 🇫🇮 It's so much fun to watch, and yes, there's an orchestra playing with them.
ELP was my introduction to Classical Music, with such pieces as Pictures at an Exhibition, Fanfare For The Common Man etc.
Yes, Bach Bethoven Mozart and Mussorgskij were real Rockers. Try the Pictures at an exhibition Concert (Mussorgskij) donne by this 3 Guys. You will love it.^^
I grew up going to the symphony and playing cello. Pablo Casals was my idol. I think 'Pictures' is one of the greatest of all classical compositions, written for a friend who died.
Mussorgskij was a shroom-chomper...amanita poisoning can cause a staccato restlessness...you can hear it in places...
Tarkus is the very essence of prog music! You must react! A duty 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Kel's facial expressions... GOLD!!!
The beginning of this video Rondo is actually Dave Brubeck’s blue Rondo à la Turk with the time signature changed from 6/8 to 4/4
The drum solo makes this video a thousand better.
My first experience listening to ELP was in 89 . Trilogy was the album and from start to finish I was blown away .I'd never heard anything like it
Kel's face exhibits a mixture of amazement and confusion. Cool.
best reaction video 😹, I love ELP 🥰
Such a fantastic band and talented players
No one like them
Legend Band.. RIP Emerson and Lake
In the 70's I was a teenager at a buddy's house his older brother that had a German reel to reel player and listening to ELO on his head phones was mind blowing good
Nothing like a little "Emerson" to get you going in the morning.
Damn, I miss him ! IMHO, he was THE best keyboardist EVER on this planet !!! RIP "Fingers" !
Just love Kel's enthusiasm
I saw that same concert in Houston in 1970 at the Music Hall. 45 years later I saw Keith Emerson and Greg Lake at the Verizon Theatre in Houston. What an amazing talent.
I love your channel, i enjoy the music, but i enjoy watching the love you guy's have for one another, just watching you two puts a smile on my face, and oh yeah please do some gnr thanks
Kel and Rich sounds like a country duo like Big and Rich!
Fantastic.
I have the DVD of ELP concert where Keith Emerson stands on the piano and play's it backwards, and what he does with the organ is amazing
I was introduced to ELP by my brother who was 5 years older than me and that was early into my teens when I first heard them after my brother Paul went to the Isle of White pop festival and saw ELP there. I can remember at some point seeing a brief video in a program about ELP on UK television some years ago that showed Keith Emerson playing a grand piano, nothing spectacular I hear you saying, but he was strapped to the piano stool which was connected to the piano and the whole thing was spinning around. He was playing a classical piece perfectly as he spun around with the axis being in the middle so that he himself was going up and down around the connecting pole. His suicide was a sad loss to music and his talent is greatly missed.
Give her "Trilogy." You want precision???
You mean "Fugue," between the 2 parts of The Endless Enigma, where Emerson is playing a sadistic piano exercise.
@@ThatsMrPencilneck2U No, I meant "Trilogy," where the first portion of it was very classically influenced grand piano before all hell breaks loose.
@@carty43 Wow, It's been way too long since I've listened to that album. Through the years, I've thought of the trickiest pieces Emerson did on piano, and thought of "Trilogy" as nice, but nothing on the order of 2nd Impression or the solo portion of Three Fates. The trio section of the Three Fates doesn't seem that complicated, but is definitely NOT nice. Three Fates would definitely not be good for a reaction, becaise the organ solo would lose a RUclips audience in a heartbeat.
@@ThatsMrPencilneck2U Then the progression would be to listen to "Pirates" and "Fanfare."
Yeah Trilogy has a masterful piano part, this will be better.
I was lucky to accompany ELP on tour with a tour manager and Rocky had to re-build Keith's Hammond L100 organ after every night!!
Play in the beginning,great song. Lucky man was their first radio hit,also the first time the moog synthesizer was used
Wow cousin It really can play those drums.
Never heard this song b4. Kel's face I'm the beginning of the song says what I was thinking lmao.
What a trip!!!!
listen to ELP LIVE FROM THE BIG O FROM MONTREAL!!! I was there great concert kel will love it, especially C'EST LA VIE, I AM FROM MONTREAL
YOU'VE REALLY DUN IT THIS TIME!!!!!!
Woooooo!
#EmersonLakeandPowell, The Score, England, The whole Emerson, Lake and Powell album reminds me of the things my Grandad used to tell me about his time in the Army during WW2.
I was at their first gig, the Isle of Whight. I knew Emerson from The Nice “ America”, which Bernstein said he liked.
ELP aroused an interest in classical music in me and many others.
saw them live in memphis hell of a show
Gratulations Kel, you are on the right way to free your mind. That‘s the reward for being open to new experiences. BTW I i’d love to see your reaction to Terry Kath‘s „Free Form Guitar“, live version.
Saw them in December of 77 on the Works tour.
Sounds like a spring reverb tank. You can get that "explosion" sound on older amps that came with old reverb tanks.
Keith Emerson ¡WOW! 😳
Now THAT was a Roller Coaster Ride
ELP's "Take A Pebble" is a Fav of mine, just laid back but technical, think Kel would love it.
For me, my favourite ELP album is 'Pictures at an Exhibition' , It is a recording of the band's arrangement of Pictures at an
Exhibition by Modest Mussorgsky, performed at Newcastle City Hall on 26
March 1971. Cheers!
"in order to be a great musician you need to know your instrument forwards & backwards"
Keith Emerson - "hold my beer"
Hold my knife
@@ADITYASINGH-vc4gm Ha!
The look on Kel's face is priceless as Keith thrashes his keyboards around she looks horrified. Keith Emerson was the ultimate showman and sadly missed.
I saw ELP do a variation of Rondo live in 1973 in Glasgow. It was an astonishing sight seeing Keith Emerson lying on his back with an organ on his chest as he played the keyboard upside down, with the aid of knives at one point - just for added sprinkles. You're right that it wasn't musically flawless, but it should be acknowledged that Keith could have played Bach note-perfect if he had wanted to. Much as I like Bach's music, I'm so glad he didn't want to.
You must get Kel to watch some Rick Wakeman
Trevor Lees, The 6 Wives Of Henry VIII.
Lol
Haha Kels expressions make my laugh 😂😂😂
The next time you want to say "OK, boomer," remember - this is what we listened to in high school & college!
Emerson was the MAN!!! God bless both Keith & Greg!
Hey, Keith was a show-off, and loved volume, but was a jazzer at heart. He loved to solo, and cramming a recognizable melody in between all the Futurist noise-making and organ abuse was one of his little tricks. Improvisation is your musical soul laid bare. x
Tarkus, Pictures At Exhibition, Brain Salad Surgery
You two are great.
Thanks
Flashback to my teen years. Great group that during its time produced a sound that blew people’s minds. Strong classical roots to these guys. Don’t forget this was the age of experimental drugs!
Keith followed the tradition of "musikalische spass" (musical jokes) of Mozart, for example playing lying down under the organ.
Keith in concert with his former band The Nice, whilst playing Rondo, once jumped over the organ and ended up down in the audience, he was approached by a guard asking: "who are you, where did you come from?"
Keith replied:
"I am in the band, you better let me up so we can finish the concert". ;)
Keith was also a masterful composer, his piano pieces are in the great romantic tradition.
You should do a reaction to The Endless Enigma or Take a Pebble.
Take a Pebble is way too much RUclips audience's attention span.
Nice pair!
The sound at the very beginning was the Hammond's (L-100 model) amplifier being over driven, otherwise known as "crunch."
The crashing sound when he rocks the organ is produced by the springs in the reverb box banging against the case and each other.
Watch a tape of Carl Palmer on the drums. Can't even describe what he does on the drumset.
Kel seemed to go from wtf, to amazed, back to wtf and finally to this is ridiculous! 🙂
I'm ignorant about ELP and seeing this makes me want to watch more live performances. Please react to some more and I'd love to learn and grow with you.
#Yes#Awaken
Get the headphones on Rich...you need to listen to Trilogy by ELP
Kel is gonna LOVE it !!
What a jam !!!
✌ and ❤
Garry
Just listening to Warfare Blown to bits retro NWoBHM. And then you guys ping up
Two worlds collided. How times change
Rondo was always the encore at ELP concerts, Keith's Hammond L100 was modified to take the punishment, the crashing sound was the reverb in the back of the organ and by switching it on and off gave the rise and fall effect plus other effects like using feedback, this could only be done with the Hammond spinet tone wheel generator series, of course other effects were added, it was part of the stage show, people loved to see it and it gave keith a chance to let ripp and Express himself, keith was a brilliant musician, innovator, exciting to listen to and watch. Helps music was complex, but exciting. I doubt weather we will hear or see anything like this again, yes people can play the music, but when ELP played live they created such excitement and atmosphere.
Keith was a brilliant at improvisation and using, jazz, classical, folk, blues and rock influences made the band so different.
I saw keith in the Nice in the late 60s and ELP in the 70s here in the UK, for me it was the most exciting music I'd ever heard, I still get a big kick out of it now and I'm in my late 60s, play Trilogy. You will enjoy it.
They were the best.
#FOGHAT "Slow Ride" & "Fool For The City" Please, Please, Please, play FOGHAT. Kel will love them. Rich, I know you must've listened to them at some point. You won't regret it. Like the URIAH HEEP video you guys did this FOGHAT two'fer will again... impress you two. KEEP KISSING! Peace! :)
My favorite song from E,L&P was lucky man.
Just in case you didn't already know..... the first section "Rondo" is their cover of the Dave Brubeck Quartet - Blue Rondo a la Turk. 1959.
Their take on another orchestra piece ,Fanfare for the Common Man,was used for the 1978 Olympics.
#Anathema - Internal Landscapes. Inspired by a man's near death experience. Mesmerizing, gorgeous stuff, really.
A great ELP album for Kel would be Pictures at an Exhibition. ELP's rendition of Modest Mussorgsky's classical piece
Prog rock needs more attention, I suggest “Awaken” by Yes, it will bring you to tears!
Kel needs to hear Pictures at an Exhibition...
Nice reaction! The horror on Kel's face as Keith wreaks havoc on that Hammond is priceless. But Kieth's showmanship goes back to 1967 when Jimi Hendrix exploded on the London music scene while Kieth was also first making a name for himself with the Nice (Pete Townshend was also smashing his guitars regularly), so the stage was already set for this sort of flamboyant showmanship in a rock setting. Kieth clearly decided that he needed to do something like that with his instrument.
Re: his playing, you sort of have to leave your classical music standards at the door when appreciating Kieth Emerson's talent. Over the years he more than proved he had some of the most ferocious chops of any rock keyboard player, although he wanted more to be recognized as a composer (he kept trying to get Leonard Bernstein's approval.) As you see here, his playing style was pretty aggressive, which unfortunately led to him being mostly disabled in his right arm later in life (and other mental health issues followed from that.)
BTW: the Rondo theme is actually based on "Blue Rondo à la Turk" by the Dave Brubeck jazz group. Although the original was in 9/8, Emerson changed it to 4/4, a version Brubeck later said he can't play. lol
That is a great steam engine start up motif!
Imagine seeing them in a 15,000 seat coliseum with huge speakers in all four corners for quad sound.
Once you hear #KarnEvil and #Hoedown , imagine that type of music being produced, getting played and being so widely popular today. 70’s!
"you'd think he was hurting the keyboard" - he was - they had to rebuild that poor little hammond C3 every night.
He did not use swords in the organ like I have seen in later gigs.
Come and join the show come in side, come in side, come in side
You need to see the second half when he’s using daggers to hold down the keys! You also need to see the spinning piano from The California Jam in 1974!
More digestible ELP, and beautiful, "Lucky man"
Go for the expanded clip when Keith pulls the organ on top of himself, and then uses daggers to hold down the keys.
You need to ELP Pictures at an Exhibition album front to back. You'll love it!