No mention of this in Planet Mellotron so I'm not sure this has any Mellotron on it as I can't recognize what keyboards Victor Peraino is using. But its a great version even though it has no Bentley Ace.
No mention of this in Planet Mellotron so I'm not sure this has any Mellotron on it as I can't recognize what keyboards Victor Peraino is using. But its a great version even though it has no Bentley Ace.
Say, are you able to access the Planet Mellotron site? I've not been able to do so for a long, long time now. I take it the site is still available? It's a great resource though I've no idea how he has time to write those hundreds of reviews!
The site still works for me. Here's a review of another Peraino-classic: http://www.planetmellotron.com/revp3.htm#peraino
The Time Captives-version of Brown is reviewed on his page: http://www.planetmellotron.com/revbrown.htm
I followed your link and got this:
This site can’t be reached
www.planetmellotron.com’s server DNS address could not be found.
DNS_PROBE_FINISHED_NXDOMAIN
^^That's odd, the links work for me. This is the homepage: http://www.planetmellotron.com/ but if this doesn't work you may contact Andy Thompson at info-at-planetmellotron.com.
I was disappointed to find that there was Mellotron all over this while I thought it was angels singing with Arthur Brown. Big mistake according to Victor.
Just heard Elliott Smith's Everything Means Nothing To Me again. It is featured on the album Figure 8, but also in the documentary and on the soundtrack "Heaven Adores You".
The Mellotron (or Chamberlain) starts in the second half:
even with 100 or so releases to their credit, His Name Is Alive (experimental; psyche; Detroit, Michigan) is a band I'm totally unfamiliar with. if I hadn't been looking up nfo on the Large Hadron Collider @ CERN, prolly still wouldn't know. their latest album, Patterns Of Light is entirely based upon their own research at the LHC and with the cooperation of scientist, Dr. James Beacham. an interesting story for sure even without tron...
Energy Acceleration (Patterns Of Light/2016)
i.ain't.dead.irock
I'm not sure if this is actually a Mellotron or not, but it sounds like one -Ooberman -'Cities that fall'
I hadn't seen it before either and because I saw the band a few months later in Rotterdam I really enjoyed it.
It's not on the Seconds Out DVD-A, which only features the album (including a wonderful 5.1 mix).
The Broof footage is indeed from the Live in 1976-set and as you can hear the Mellotron is less loud on that recording.
Got to give a mention to Greenslade here, tons of great mellotron, "Bedside Manners" LP being the best. And a particular favourite track elsewhere - "The Flower & the Young Man" by Strawbs.
'Sailor's Tale' was where I fell in love with the mellotron. To be followed by anything on the first 3 KC albums.
Much more mello-prog love has reached my ears since I started this tread three years ago. More shots in the arm for tronaholics like me! Here' s more artists, not favorite tracks that use the beast, some new, some older:
Ars De Er
All Traps On Earth
Unit Wail
Natthimlen
Anima Morte
Cirkus
Zoltan
Sermon
Far Corner
Napier's Bones
Noekk
Herd Of Instinct
Jordsjo
Keor
The Black Codex
Rivendel
Daal
Pixie Ninja
Can anyone enlighten these PE's with more?
Last edited by AncientChord; 11-30-2019 at 01:21 PM.
Day dawns dark...it now numbers infinity.
I'm not a musician, never played any instruments, never been in a band and only knew a few guys who were in bands, but years ago (maybe around 1998?) I was at Round Sounds in Redondo Beach Ca (He sold prog records/CDs, perhaps some here knew of him) and - anyway, he had a working Mellotron in his back room that he let me play (mess around with) and that was fun, it was a strange device...
Watcher Of The Skies/Seven Stones- Genesis
Epitaph- King Crimson
Have You Heard-The Voyage- The Moody Blues
O Caroline- Matching Mole
Changes/Hung Up On A Dream- The Zombies
Strawberry Fields Forever- The Beatles
New World- The Strawbs
Plague Of Lighthouse Keepers- VDGG (perhaps the most evil use of the instrument, from an act not usually associated with it)
Julie Driscoll and Brian Auger's version of 'This Wheels On Fire' popped up on my playlist today. Mellotron AND Hammond, lovely.
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