My wife and I will be there! Very much looking forward to this. The DVD from the "Olympia" tour I recently got has only whetted my appetite further.
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Brilliant band. Conceptually playful/interesting/ahead of their time too.
From an April show:
Re-Make/Re-Model (Roxy Music song)
Kiss and Tell
Slave to Love
Same Old Blues (J.J. Cale cover)
Ladytron (Roxy Music song)
If There Is Something (Roxy Music song)
Stronger Through the Years (Roxy Music song)
More Than This (Roxy Music song)
Avalon (Roxy Music song)
In Every Dream Home a Heartache (Roxy Music song)
Love Is the Drug (Roxy Music song)
Virginia Plain (Roxy Music song)
Both Ends Burning (Roxy Music song)
Editions of You (Roxy Music song)
Jealous Guy
^Pretty hard to argue with that! 'Jealous Guy' was done by them as well, of course.
Cool. I have a '76 Tull boot where Ian introduces "our new bass player, Mr John Glascock...or as he's become known to about 30 young ladies in the past 20 days, old BrittleDick...you see it just keeps coming off in his hands"...gotta love Ian's audience banter ;)
My favorite is on 20 Years Of Jethro Tull, where he says "Yes, we do take requests, what would you like to hear?", the entire audience calls out "THICK AS A BRICK!", and Ian sighs and says "Just as well, it's the other one we know", and launches into a truncated arrangement.
Ya, on that same '76 boot while he's introducing the truncated TaaB he begins the acoustic intro and the crowd goes nuts. He stops and says, "Oh yes, how could you fail to recognize that? It is of course the very famous Led Zeppelin song 'Whole Lotta Brick'" Then he does that Whole Lotta Love riff and morphs it into the TaaB intro.
The funniest Ian speech on that boot is when he introduces Barriemore Barlow. Barrie stands up to the audience cheers and Ian comments (paraphrased) "You may notice Barriemore Barlow is wearing a fantastic Scottish kilt. He was wearing it the other day at band practice and I inquired as to what type of undergarments he would be wearing to keep his private and quite naughty bits from your gaze. He told me to lift it up and have a look. So I did, and let me tell you...it was gruesome. And as I looked at it, it grew some more" :rofl
Been listening lots of Roxy Music lately. What a wonderful and unique band they were at their best!
I would rate their albums like this:
1. Stranded (1973) ****½
2. Four Your Pleasure (1973) ****½
3. Country Life (1974) ****½
4. s/t (1972) ***½
5. Siren (1975) ***½
6. Avalon (1982) ***
7. Flesh + Blood (1980) **½
8. Manifesto (1979) **½
I love the first two albums - and after all these years they still sound fresh and very hard to describe or categorize. I get a strong VDGG vibe at places, possibly because of the sax-oboe/keys interplay or Ferry's frantic performance (another predecessor is Family's Chapman in my opinion). But they were definitely eclectic as hell, and not averse to trying anything musically - the journey from song to song in those first two albums is full of chasms and surprises.
They were quite a solid band during the 70's, and somehow escaped the horrible label of progressive rock which could/would have ruined their career. But for me Roxy Music and For Your Pleasure definitely fall into whatever I understand as progressive rock.
Amazon is running a special 1 for 21 on the 1974 live archival release from Amazon. Act now!
Attachment 13733
^ Those copies are no good--they're printed upside-down!
https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon....L._SL1500_.jpg
Released today, AFAIK.
Well I’ve got 21 extra copies I can sell ya ...
(Before anyone asks, I’m sending them back to whatever warehouse they’ll certainly die in.)
https://www.amazon.com/Live-Royal-Al...n+feery&sr=8-1
Ah, that's what threw me. Titled under Bryan Ferry.
Wetton is all over Viva live...You can also see him on you tube : "Out of the blue'
Viva! is also my favorite Roxy Music-album, so I was interested to hear some more live-music from this period. Gossip (I guess not an very official label) just released "The Thrill Of It All", from a live FM Broadcast recorded at Calderone Concert Hall, Hemstead, New York on March 8th 1976. Great setlist with a lot of tracks that weren't played (recorded) during the Viva!-days:
1. "Sentimental Fool"
2. "The Thrill Of It All"
3. "Love Is The Drug"
4. "Mother Of Pearl"
5. "Bitter Sweet"
6. "Out Of The Blue"
7. "Whirlwind"
8. "Sea Breezes"
9. "Both Ends Burning"
10. "For Your Pleasure"
11. "Diamond Head"
12. "Wild Weekend"
The quality is quite good, lively audience of course (always the case with Roxy), but the sound of the music is fine. Some lovely Mellotron and violin by Jobson too!
The full set-list of the 1974 Newcastle show much of Viva! was drawn from is around. I don't know if some dubious no-name label has put it out by now.