Seite 1 von 1
Happy Anniversary 50 Jahre Yardbirds
Verfasst: Di 19. Mär 2013, 20:21
von luisa_musika
Servus Claptomanen,
da jemand nochmal Feuer gefangen!
http://www.faz.net/aktuell/feuilleton/p ... 19582.html
Die könnten doch dann im Mai bei E.C. mit feiern.
Gruß
Re: Happy Anniversary 50 Jahre Yardbirds
Verfasst: Di 19. Mär 2013, 21:24
von layla
THE YARDBIRDS - 50TH ANNIVERSARY CONCERT
Die Geburtstagsparty in der St. George Suite des Twickenham-Stadions:
For Your Love - Medley
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RvxskgDRDuE
Gruß
Layla
Re: Happy Anniversary 50 Jahre Yardbirds
Verfasst: Di 25. Mär 2014, 12:18
von Palpitations
Hallo Fan-Gemeinde,
weiß jemand, warum die Live-Scheibe:
Yardbirds, The – Live! Blueswailing July '64
Tracklist
1.Someone To Love Me
2.Too Much Monkey Business
3.I Got Love If You Want It
4.Smokestack Lightning
5.Good Morning Little Schoolgirl
6.She Is So Respectable / Humpty Dumpty
7.The Sky Is Crying
nicht in den Discographie´n vom Forum und "Where´s Eric" zu finden ist?
Lg
Palpitations
Re: Happy Anniversary 50 Jahre Yardbirds
Verfasst: Di 25. Mär 2014, 16:34
von jsauer56
Habe diesen Kommentar zur CD gefunden:
This recently discovered seven-song set is an awe-inspiring live recording of the Yardbirds before their official debut, Five Live Yardbirds. As a document, it adds considerable weight to the band's early rep that has been passed into legend. It also rewrites history: this short set blows Five Live away both in terms of performance and sound quality. This is the second incarnation of the band, with Chris Dreja, Jim McCarty, Keith Relf, Paul Samwell-Smith, and new guitarist Eric Clapton (who had replaced Andrew Topham). The music here roars, screams, howls, growls, and bleeds white-boy British blues; it is blistering in its raw intensity, with covers of Chuck Berry'sToo Much Monkey Business and the standard Smokestack Lightning. The band's trademark rave-up antics are abundant here (check out She's So Respectable), and in the closer -- one of the most startling rock versions of The Sky Is Crying on record -- the listener gets the clearest picture yet of Clapton as an early and worthy guitar hero. His playing is so inspired and full of razor-sharp turnarounds and knotty arpeggios, one has to wonder what was left for him to accomplish even then. The energy here is crackling, dangerous, and woolly. Anyone interested in vintage garage or modern garage rock should check this out, as it rivals most of what comes out of today's raw and raucous scene as well. Indeed, history has been rewritten. ~
Thom Jurek, All Music Guide