OT: Music Sharing Thread 2

brentashton

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Jan 21, 2018
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Ronnie King dead at 76.
Bummer. Stampeders in my local hockey rink in the mid 1970s was one of my first (of very many) concert events. I had the chance to see them again at Rock the Lake in Kelowna in 2018. The guy was feeling it that night. He was the life of the show!
 
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Morpheus

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I was born in 1980 so the Stampeders were before my time.

But I do remember when I was 6, I was playing some 45’s at my uncles place, and I was flipping through the pile and stumbled across ‘Hit the Road Jack’.

I must have played it 50-60 times in a row and when we had to leave I put up a tantrum until my uncle gifted it to me.

I started collecting their LPs in my 20’s and they are such an underrated group. The recordings themselves have not aged at all, great guitar tone(s), tight unit, and at times they got quite hard rocking.

LPs I have are: Carry On, Steamin’, From the Fire, New Day.

RIP Ronnie King

 
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MoontoScott

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Jun 2, 2012
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I was born in 1980 so the Stampeders were before my time.

But I do remember when I was 6, I was playing some 45’s at my uncles place, and I was flipping through the pile and stumbled across ‘Hit the Road Jack’.

I must have played it 50-60 times in a row and when we had to leave I put up a tantrum until my uncle gifted it to me.

I started collecting their LPs in my 20’s and they are such an underrated group. The recordings themselves have not aged at all, great guitar tone(s), tight unit, and at times they got quite hard rocking.

LPs I have are: Carry On, Steamin’, From the Fire, New Day.

RIP Ronnie King


Thanks for your post. You know your stuff.

Imho the Stampeders were the most underrated Canadian Rock Band of that magical 1970's period.

They first charted with "Carry Me" somewhere around 1970. Then came the monster hit "Sweet City Woman" in 1971 and it sold about 4 million copies.

Unfortunately, American audiences loved the song but thought that the Stampeders were a Country and Western group. That's not hard to imagine given their name and the dominant banjo chords in the song but in fact the Stampeders were a rock group and had a hard edged rock sound, especially when you saw them live (I saw them 3 times). They never charted that well again in the USA with the possible exception of Hit the Road Jack which was also covered by Ray Charles a few years earlier.

My favorite Stampeder song was "Wild Eyes" which is a knock-out rock classic that Rich Dodson played on the double neck guitar. I ran up to him after one of the shows and said "How many overdubs did you use-how do you tune your axe to get that sound-- and how many takes before you got the final cut?" He calmly looked at me and said "Man, I don't really remember." I said ya, cool and got him to sign the T-shirt.

Another memory from that show was Ronnie King saying "I'm the Keith Richards of this band." It was an honest comment about some of his life and when I saw Ronnie play for the last time about five years ago he had aged and slowed down considerably.

Its sad to see guys like this as well as Gerry Doucette and Myles Goodwin go (all in the last few years) but hey--Time waits for no one.

Thanks Ronnie
 

brentashton

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Jan 21, 2018
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Thanks for your post. You know your stuff.

Imho the Stampeders were the most underrated Canadian Rock Band of that magical 1970's period.

They first charted with "Carry Me" somewhere around 1970. Then came the monster hit "Sweet City Woman" in 1971 and it sold about 4 million copies.

Unfortunately, American audiences loved the song but thought that the Stampeders were a Country and Western group. That's not hard to imagine given their name and the dominant banjo chords in the song but in fact the Stampeders were a rock group and had a hard edged rock sound, especially when you saw them live (I saw them 3 times). They never charted that well again in the USA with the possible exception of Hit the Road Jack which was also covered by Ray Charles a few years earlier.

My favorite Stampeder song was "Wild Eyes" which is a knock-out rock classic that Rich Dodson played on the double neck guitar. I ran up to him after one of the shows and said "How many overdubs did you use-how do you tune your axe to get that sound-- and how many takes before you got the final cut?" He calmly looked at me and said "Man, I don't really remember." I said ya, cool and got him to sign the T-shirt.

Another memory from that show was Ronnie King saying "I'm the Keith Richards of this band." It was an honest comment about some of his life and when I saw Ronnie play for the last time about five years ago he had aged and slowed down considerably.

Its sad to see guys like this as well as Gerry Doucette and Myles Goodwin go (all in the last few years) but hey--Time waits for no one.

Thanks Ronnie
The guy I was amazed to see in 2018 was Kim Berly. Drummers tend to be the more athletic just given the nature of their instrument they play but the guy didn’t look a day over 30.
 

MoontoScott

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Jun 2, 2012
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The guy I was amazed to see in 2018 was Kim Berly. Drummers tend to be the more athletic just given the nature of their instrument they play but the guy didn’t look a day over 30.
Yes, last time I saw them Berly looked young and fit. King and Dodson had both aged significantly.
 
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Stoneman89

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Feb 8, 2008
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Eric Carmen, 'Hungry Eyes' singer, dies at 74: 'His music touched so many'​

Singer died 'in his sleep,' according to wife

And another one kicks the bucket. All these 70's artists going by the wayside these days. Raspberries were a kickass band but Carmen had the ability to write sweet sad songs too.
 
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brentashton

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Jan 21, 2018
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Eric Carmen, 'Hungry Eyes' singer, dies at 74: 'His music touched so many'​

Singer died 'in his sleep,' according to wife

And another one kicks the bucket. All these 70's artists going by the wayside these days. Raspberries were a kickass band but Carmen had the ability to write sweet sad songs too.
I liked Eric Carmen’s stuff, especially the early Raspberries era. Wasn’t a fan of the one song from the Dirty Dancing soundtrack, Hungry Eyes(?),just never grew on me.

I went and saw John Waite last Friday at a local casino. He played a lot of the Baby’s and Bad English stuff along with the requisite solo hits. He also did a rendition of Led Zeps Whole lotta Love that was killer. The guy is 71, looks very fit. I try to hit any of these shows with artists from my teens and onward as they are all unfortunately, passing as we might expect but still seems like a part of one’s youth goes with each passing artist.
 
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Stoneman89

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brentashton

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Jan 21, 2018
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Damn! Not sure there are any guys left from that great band. Jessica and Ramblin Man were always staples o my playlists and remain so to this day. His guitar work is legendary.
I think you’re right. The guys that made it the band they were, are sadly all gone. They’re songwriting spawned so many other bands and really, an entire new genre of rock n roll, back in the day.
 
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bellagiobob

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Jul 27, 2006
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Thank You, Goodnight, is a for part doc about the Bon Jovi story. I'm a big fan, so really enjoyed it. Really too bad about the voice issues that he has had, still has the energy to tour. It's on Disney and Hulu.
 
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Stoneman89

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Feb 8, 2008
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Thank You, Goodnight, is a for part doc about the Bon Jovi story. I'm a big fan, so really enjoyed it. Really too bad about the voice issues that he has had, still has the energy to tour. It's on Disney and Hulu.
I think the voice is the first thing for a lot of these singers to go, especially the ones that used to belt out the high hard ones back in the day. Roger Daltry recently retired because of it, Hugh Lewis quit many years ago due to vocal issues, etc. I always found it slightly disappointing when you saw bands in the their later years, and when the time came for the signature high tremor, the lead man sang it one octave lower. When a guy can still hit the high register with authority into his 70's, that's impressive.
 
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Dorian2

Define that balance
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Just recently checked out Insomnium, Ominum Gatherum, and Wilderun at the Starlite room. My daughter got tix so it was a first listen event for me for all of these acts. Each band brought it and the crowd and energy were amazing. As per usual, this music is not for everybody.

 
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ZJuice

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May 17, 2010
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Thank You, Goodnight, is a for part doc about the Bon Jovi story. I'm a big fan, so really enjoyed it. Really too bad about the voice issues that he has had, still has the energy to tour. It's on Disney and Hulu.
My dad said he went to a Judas Priest concert and Bon Jovi was the opener. The crowd was chanting "JUDAS" during his set and he apparently stopped playing to whine something like "you don't know who I am! I'm going to be huge!"
He was right about being huge, but still funny!
 
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Dorian2

Define that balance
Jul 17, 2009
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My dad said he went to a Judas Priest concert and Bon Jovi was the opener. The crowd was chanting "JUDAS" during his set and he apparently stopped playing to whine something like "you don't know who I am! I'm going to be huge!"
He was right about being huge, but still funny!

I was at that show. After the Bon Jovi set, he and a bunch of people went out to the K-day's fairground to take in the action. I don't remember him stopping the set, but the mindset of the time at a Metal show was different then. Most of us were not crazy about certain acts. Worst I saw was at Van Halen in 1984 when their opener, The Velcros. They were booed off the stage after 2 or 3 songs. Maybe only 1, lol. Can't remember exactly. They weren't too happy with us.
 

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