I never knew Python Lee Jackson was a band, and not the nickname of The Nice's bassist Lee Jackson.
I never knew Python Lee Jackson was a band, and not the nickname of The Nice's bassist Lee Jackson.
"You know that band, Steely Dan?"
"Yeah."
"Do you know its only TWO GUYS!"
"Well, Fagen and Becker are the songwri..."
"Only two guys on those records!"
"Well, two songwriters, yes, but there are studio musicia..."
"CAN YOU IMAGINE HOW LONG IT MUST TAKE FOR ONLY TWO GUYS TO RECORD ALL THOSE PARTS?"
"Its more than two gu..."
"TWO GUYS! TWO FUCKIN' GUYS!"
"Help!"
"THEY DO IT ALL, MAN! IN-FREAKIN'-CREDIBLE!"
"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it."
-- Aristotle
Nostalgia, you know, ain't what it used to be. Furthermore, they tells me, it never was.
“A Man Who Does Not Read Has No Appreciable Advantage Over the Man Who Cannot Read” - Mark Twain
I remember back before I'd ever heard The Grateful Dead I thought the name sounded kind of ominous, and since I'd heard them called Acid Rock, I expected all their music to be dark and loud, and angry. Then in college I had friends who were into them and I got into them and I realized it was songs like Uncle John's Band, which my grandmother probably would have liked.
Hurtleturtled Out of Heaven - an electronic music composition, on CD and vinyl
https://michaelpdawson.bandcamp.com
http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Pr...MCD-spc-7.aspx
Uhhhh, how do I approach this??? Was “python” a term of, um, endearment?
“Pleasure and pain can be experienced simultaneously,” she said, gently massaging my back as we listened to her Coldplay CD.
Randy Jackson, musician. Discuss.
The bassist Lindsay Cooper often was mistaken for reed-player Lindsay Cooper. In fact I think both played with Mike Oldfield at different times?
I bought a Christian folk album by a guitarist named Mark Lang, thinking it was the same Mark Lang who did "Texas John Boscoe" in 1976.
I bought the French band Et Cetera thinking it was Wolfgang Daunier's Et Cetera.
Steve Miller -- of Miller/Coxhill Coxhill/Miller fame -- is not the same Steve Miller as Phil Miller's brother, nor the American rock guitarist, nor the British electronica artist, nor the American blues pianist, nor several other Steves, Stevens or Stephen MIllers. Oh wait -- another misconception. The first two I mentioned are in fact one-and-the-same.
One’s a man and one’s a woman.
At least you didn’t buy an album by Polish boy-band Magma thinking it was Christian Vander’s crew. Not that I did, but I remember that Amazon was selling one of their albums, which some people did mistake for the other Magma:I bought the French band Et Cetera thinking it was Wolfgang Daunier's Et Cetera.
In their defense, to the untrained eye, Polish does look an awful lot like Kobaïan!
How about the keyboard-playing Michael Boddicker? Same as the baseball-playing Michael Boddicker?Steve Miller -- of Miller/Coxhill Coxhill/Miller fame -- is not the same Steve Miller as Phil Miller's brother, nor the American rock guitarist, nor the British electronica artist, nor the American blues pianist, nor several other Steves, Stevens or Stephen MIllers. Oh wait -- another misconception. The first two I mentioned are in fact one-and-the-same.
Confirmed Bachelors: the dramedy hit of 1883...
“Pleasure and pain can be experienced simultaneously,” she said, gently massaging my back as we listened to her Coldplay CD.
^It is as it was then. The story I heard was that in the late 60s, he did a guest vocal of 'In A Broken Dream' as a favour (you can hear a wobble here and there). But of course after 'Maggie May' etc., Stewart was a commercial hot property, so out it came again.
I can't even count the number of times (especially in the early 70s) that I heard stuff like, "Yeah, Jethro Tull, he's really good, but what a weird dude!".
To a lesser extent (and Gravedigger alluded to it), the same was true of Steely Dan, including the drunk black dude on the Live Across America album who never uses any other pronoun than "he" in his hilarious intro.
"My choice early in life was either to be a piano player in a whorehouse or a politician, and to tell the truth, there's hardly any difference"
President Harry S. Truman
This is in no way prog related, but I used to think that orchestra conductor Bernard Hermann in the BBC TV music-hall show 'The Good Old Days' was the same Bernard Hermann who wrote soundtracks for 'Psycho' and 'Taxi Driver' among numerous others.
There's quite a story about that guy. His name was Jerome Aniton, and he was originally a truck driver for the band, but was so drunk, and so often drunk they replaced him in that capacity. However, the entire band found him hilarious - among other things, he thought that Donald Fagen was "Stevie Dan" and could not be set straight - so they kept him on as a sort of court fool. And they gave him the job of coming out in a red velvet suit and introducing "Stevie Dan" with an inebriated, incoherent version of a big James Brown buildup.
This is too embarassing, I could fill pages. Just a sample: I had no idea for decades that Cadence and Cascade wasn't sung by Lake, I hadn't paid attention to the inner sleeve.
Which ones Pink.
For years I was under the misconception that Screaming Lord Sutch was some kind of great performer and impresario in that he got all these great stars to play with him. All my high school pals were really into him and his ... and Friends album. Years later I learned that he was some lunatic nut who put out novelty records that weren't all that good and was a poor imitation of Screamin' Jay Hawkins.
Lou
Looking forward to my day in court.
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