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John9
Old Love
United Kingdom
2154 Posts |
Posted - 14/04/2011 : 22:47:19
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As we know, the first time Arthur Lee was heard on a commercially available recording was in 1963 on his LAGs single (on Capitol) The Ninth Wave. Earlier this evening, I came upon these lines in an anthology of poetry:
And then the two Dropt to the cove, and watched the great sea fall, Wave after wave, each mightier than the last, Till last, a ninth one, gathering half the deep And full of voices, slowly rose and plunged Roaring, and all the wave was in a flame
And the poem...........The Coming of Arthur by Alfred Lord Tennyson (1856)
Of course, it is possible that Arthur Lee was borrowing from Californian surfing parlance rather than Arthurian legend - but it is interesting to see a deeper resonance to it all. Coincidentally, Kate Bush entitles the entire second side of her 1985 Hounds of Love masterpiece The Ninth Wave - brilliantly weaving into the music a succession of images,sounds, memories and flashbacks from a dream of near drowning. And just to round things off, here's the 1850 Russian painting with the same title and theme:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Featured_picture_candidates/The_Ninth_Wave |
Edited by - John9 on 15/04/2011 09:39:18 |
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rocker
Old Love
USA
3606 Posts |
Posted - 15/04/2011 : 14:05:11
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john...good stuff..that painting is remarkable..and as for the poetry I think it's amazingg that its lines can be said right by where Arthur was supposedly born, Tintagel, and they'd fit perfectly considering the views which are right by the ocean and there is also absolutely a cove there.......and you don't think the knight on the cover of Four Sail means anything?????....secrets of Arthur!....wooooooooo.... |
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gatemouthmoore
Fourth Love
202 Posts |
Posted - 15/04/2011 : 19:42:19
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Forget Bacon, Arthur was the true Bard of Avon.... He wrote all of Shakespeare's plays. |
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John9
Old Love
United Kingdom
2154 Posts |
Posted - 15/04/2011 : 20:46:45
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Rocker - thanks for that. You're right - Sir Lancelot on the Four Sail album sleeve complements the theme perfectly....I would imagine that William S. Harvey gets the credit for that one. I've mentioned in another posting that Peter Schauman's representation of the band members on the rear cover makes them resemble four Norse gods. I've been quite a frequent visitor to Tintagel over the years.....it soon sends your imagination into overdrive.
Gatemouthmore.....a fascinating theory....and there was me thinking it was actually Ben Jonson. But I'll look into it...I love doing research! |
Edited by - John9 on 15/04/2011 22:20:10 |
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sometimesmylifeissoeerie
Fourth Love
198 Posts |
Posted - 16/04/2011 : 06:41:24
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Hmm, Tintagel? Maybe AL listened to Arnold Bax... |
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rocker
Old Love
USA
3606 Posts |
Posted - 18/04/2011 : 18:20:12
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hehehhehehhhehh...good one ole Arthur and Bax!!!
john..hey I liked Tintagel so much I would've stayed on there to just take the tickets! I'd get paid just with the view!...;-)...PS I got lost when I left..it was light when I looked over the cliffs...it was dark when I tried to find my away around Bodmin..no lights!!!!!..but the spirit of "Arthur" was with me...
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