Reelin’ in the Years 227: Solsbury Hill
Posted in 1970s, Music, Reelin' In The Years at 12:00 on 10 November 2023
Peter Gabriel’s first solo single. From 1977
Peter Gabriel: Solsbury Hill
Posted in 1970s, Music, Reelin' In The Years at 12:00 on 10 November 2023
Peter Gabriel’s first solo single. From 1977
Peter Gabriel: Solsbury Hill
Posted in 1980s, Live It Up, Music at 12:00 on 29 January 2021
I heard this on the radio a couple of weeks ago and immediately thought, “That’s Phil Collins drumming.” It’s very reminiscent of his contribution to the track Intruder from Peter Gabriel’s third solo album and is a signature drum sound which Collins seems to have created with Hugh Padgham.
I confess I didn’t remember who had performed this song and was a little surprised to hear the DJ say it was Anni-Frid Lyngstad – she from ABBA.
It was indeed Collins on the drums and he also produced the track.
The song was taken from Anni-Frid’s first solo LP, Something Going On, released in 1982. It only reached no 43 in the UK charts.
Anni-Frid Lyngstad: I Know There’s Something Going On
Posted in 1960s, Events dear boy. Events, Jethro Tull, Lyrics, Music, The Moody Blues at 12:00 on 12 January 2018
Ray Thomas, who died this week was a multi-instrumentalist not very well-served by most of the time on stage with The Moody Blues merely flourishing a tambourine or otherwise not seeming to do very much. That perception would be to undervalue him greatly.
It was his contribution as a flautist where he really counted, a contribution that only added to the already distinctive sound of the band. As a flautist in a rock band he was for a while unique. (Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull came along later as did Peter Gabriel with Genesis.) That flute embellished mightily the power of Nights in White Satin, the song which became emblematic of the revamped Moody Blues.
A founder member of the band in its first (bluesy) incarnation – Go Now etc – his solid bass voice enhanced the vocal harmonies which were so much a part of the re-incarnated band’s sound.
For some odd reason there seemed to be a regular order of song-writers in those early albums by the “new” Moodies with Thomas always having song three* on side one as one of his spots.
Among his songs were Another Morning*, Twilight Time, Dr Livingstone, I Presume?*, Dear Diary*, Lazy Day, Floating*, Eternity Road, with his collaborations with Justin Hayward, Visions of Paradise and Are You Sitting Comfortably? being especially memorable.
It was song five, side one on In Search of the Lost Chord, though, that was his apotheosis. That song was Legend of a Mind with a lyric about Timothy Leary and supposed mind expansion, “Timothy’ Leary’s dead, No, no, no, no, he’s outside looking in.” Apparently Leary once told Thomas the song made him more famous than anything he had ever done for himself.
But who needed drugs when music itself could be this transportive?
Here’s a promotional film for Legend of a Mind made around the time of its first release. Thomas’s flute solo here is sublime.
The Moody Blues: Legend of a Mind
Ray Thomas: 29/12/1941 – 4/1/2018. So it goes. Thanks for the trips round the bay.
Posted in 1970s, Music, Reelin' In The Years at 12:00 on 8 November 2013
In the mid 70s (and for a good long time after) my favourite band was Genesis. Yes I’d moved on from the Troggs and Sweet. I never saw them live with Peter Gabriel but I did on their first tour without him and saw the man himself on his first solo tour – both at the Apollo in Glasgow.
This is the sad tale of a lad whose only knowledge of women comes from a “how to” book.
Move over Casanova.
Genesis: Counting Out Time