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Old_Man
Old Love
United Kingdom
668 Posts |
Posted - 07/11/2010 : 18:51:47
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Did anyone else see Robert Plant's plug for Forever Changes on tv last night? |
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lemonade kid
Old Love
USA
9873 Posts |
Posted - 07/11/2010 : 20:10:24
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No, but Robert seems to be the biggest promoter of all things Love nowadays! Good for Mr Plant!
____________________________________________________________ We need Hippies, now, more than ever... -LK |
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stewart
Old Love
United Kingdom
568 Posts |
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Old_Man
Old Love
United Kingdom
668 Posts |
Posted - 07/11/2010 : 22:20:47
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Sorry would have been UK viewers only, cheers for the link stewart. |
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rocker
Old Love
USA
3606 Posts |
Posted - 08/11/2010 : 15:06:13
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..too bad would have liked to hear him talk about it...maybe on dvd????... |
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lemonade kid
Old Love
USA
9873 Posts |
Posted - 08/11/2010 : 19:57:14
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This is from the "center stage" button at Rhino -- an interview with Plant about Love....maybe this has been seen here (not by me), and I don't think this is the BBC thing, but here is an interview about Love with Plant.....rocker.
Robert has been a fan of Love right from the beginning...
http://www.rhino.com/article/video-interview-love-robert-plant-arthur-lee
____________________________________________________________ We need Hippies, now, more than ever... -LK |
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John9
Old Love
United Kingdom
2154 Posts |
Posted - 08/11/2010 : 20:50:23
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This is excellent LK....many thanks. It is interesting though that he is another of those who seem to think almost entirely in terms of Love's first three albums. As I've posted many times, I've always been able to see the genius behind those in Four Sail and Out Here as well. But I recognise that not everyone sees things that way. I believe Robert Plant and Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull to be two of rock's most articulate spokesmen. |
Edited by - John9 on 08/11/2010 20:52:49 |
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lemonade kid
Old Love
USA
9873 Posts |
Posted - 08/11/2010 : 23:13:39
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quote: Originally posted by John9
This is excellent LK....many thanks. It is interesting though that he is another of those who seem to think almost entirely in terms of Love's first three albums. As I've posted many times, I've always been able to see the genius behind those in Four Sail and Out Here as well. But I recognise that not everyone sees things that way. I believe Robert Plant and Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull to be two of rock's most articulate spokesmen.
Although we enjoy Four Sail & Out Here, even I think of the real LoVE as the Bryan & Arthur Love of the first three LPs....I think of the rest as (really) Arthur Lee albums with varying casts of band members called Love....excellent as they are, they just can't compare to that first magic.....
....At least for me...
and that was born up by the Love tours of the 2000's when Arthur finally returned to FC and that original Love magic that brought tears to the eyes of loyal UK fans.
Thank you Baby Lem for helping Arthur find that magic...we don't mention that enough!!
____________________________________________________________ We need Hippies, now, more than ever... -LK |
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John9
Old Love
United Kingdom
2154 Posts |
Posted - 09/11/2010 : 00:45:43
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Yes and I was one of them....there was something life-affirming about the way Arthur had reclaimed himself. But those shows also yielded Listen To My Song, August, Always See Your Face and Singing Cowboy. And I believe that the same period saw Arthur perform Willow Willow and Robert Montgomery. I actually think he was proud of his late 60s work as well....although of course, Forever Changes is beyond compare.
The other guys who were in the group between 1968 and 1970 may look like footnotes in Love's history now...but the interviews with Arthur at the time show that he did think of them as part of a living band. |
Edited by - John9 on 09/11/2010 01:06:10 |
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lemonade kid
Old Love
USA
9873 Posts |
Posted - 09/11/2010 : 01:07:39
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quote: Originally posted by John9
Yes and I was one of them....there was something life-affirming about the way Arthur had reclaimed himself. But those shows also yielded Listen To My Song, August, Always See Your Face and Singing Cowboy. And I believe that the same period saw Arthur perform Willow Willow and Robert Montgomery. I actually think he was proud of his late 60s work as well....although of course, Forever Changes is beyond compare.
There are many songs from Arthur's late 60's catalog that I love, I must say. Doesn't get much better than these tracks....
I Still Wonder Listen To My Song Doggone Willow Willow Nice to Be Gather Round...is actually one of my all time favorite Arthur Lee tune.
____________________________________________________________ We need Hippies, now, more than ever... -LK |
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Joe Morris
Old Love
3491 Posts |
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lemonade kid
Old Love
USA
9873 Posts |
Posted - 09/11/2010 : 02:32:27
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quote: Originally posted by Joe Morris
this is a pretty good cover of "Listen to my song" I found on Youtube!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rIIupkwAZu8
Betcha you had to search long and hard for that one, Joe!
____________________________________________________________ We need Hippies, now, more than ever... -LK |
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rocker
Old Love
USA
3606 Posts |
Posted - 09/11/2010 : 14:18:54
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whoa....You know I enver saw that interview. It was a big revelation. Plant sure is a very eloquent speaker on Love's music and it was just great to hear him extolling and praising their music....FC .."eternal collection of songs"...."sang like an angel and an imprisoned tiger"...Maclean and Lee..great users of language...and and according to Plant..."they never give the show away". For sure, they produced great great art. Plant articulated much that I probably felt about their music but never was conscious of. I don't know were the accolades will go about the band but Plant rightly puts them where they should be as great artists. Plant certainly knows his muses!... |
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