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RIP Keith Emerson

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Comments

  • Wow....worst start of a year that I've ever heard of for musicians! Emerson was such an icon! RIP

  • Tragic news. It seems so many music idols are falling like flies, but this one hits me hard. What an innovator and entertainer, as anyine who saw him live will testify.

  • Oh, man...I can't believe it. Best keyboard player, IMHO. RIP.

  • Very sad indeed. RIP.

  • I had the privilege of seeing Emerson with The Nice, a tour just after ELP released Tarkus, again for the Brain Salad Surgery tour, and then a reunion tour after Black Moon was released. Always the consummate keyboardist, showman and innovator. We've lost another legend this year.

  • edited March 2016

    My hero! I'm devistated. I may have to go offline and off world for a while. Before I do...well I can't say enough about the man, and his music, but I already wrote some stuff. I made a blog post about a fantastic event where I witnessed the man himself conduct an orchestra in 2014.

    Edit, direct link to my post:
    https://wtomusic.com/2014/10/24/an-evening-with-mr-keith-emerson/

  • Everyone try to play your ipad keyboards backwards tonight, in honor.

  • @reverberator said:
    http://www.factmag.com/2016/03/11/keith-emerson-of-emerson-lake-palmer-has-died/

    I think I'll spend a little time going through some modular apps tonight.

    All last week I was on a modular kick! I actually made a folder just for them, and on top of that I watched a documentary on theMoog Modular which featured Keith!!! RIP

  • Wow, I wasn't a fan of his but what a terrible music year so far. I really do think the world may be setting up for a reboot. Hopefully the social workers and bassists are spared. ;-)

  • edited March 2016

    @mrufino1 said:
    Wow, I wasn't a fan of his but what a terrible music year so far. I really do think the world may be setting up for a reboot. Hopefully the social workers and bassists are spared. ;-)

    Seventy-one. Not quite the batting average, but many musicians (of this generation anyway) probably taunted the actuarial tables a little with regards to ingestion and lack of sleep. It seems like a bit of a cull at the moment, but it's not; just life.

  • Bummer!! Another talented loss!!

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    It seems like a bit of a cull at the moment, but it's not; just life.

    Or the end of it, to be more precise.

    I was thinking about this the other day. In the revelatory words of Jeff Mangum: "how strange to be anything at all." But my epilogue, even more strange: "to be anything at all and then not to be".

  • @syrupcore said:
    Everyone try to play your ipad keyboards backwards tonight, in honor.

    I stabbed mine.
    Oops!

  • @JeffChasteen said:

    @syrupcore said:
    Everyone try to play your ipad keyboards backwards tonight, in honor.

    I stabbed mine.
    Oops!

    Ha! Solid tribute.

    I was gonna stand on it while playing it backwards but I'm just too damn fat to reach down that far.

  • @syrupcore said:

    @JeffChasteen said:

    @syrupcore said:
    Everyone try to play your ipad keyboards backwards tonight, in honor.

    I stabbed mine.
    Oops!

    Ha! Solid tribute.

    I was gonna stand on it while playing it backwards but I'm just too damn fat to reach down that far.

    Don't forget to turn on 'orientation lock' if you attempt the 'Flying iPad'

  • @syrupcore said:
    I was gonna stand on it while playing it backwards but I'm just too damn fat to reach down that far.

    You'll cut your toes up once that screen cracks! I got my iPad strung up to flip, but I can't play it to save my life!

    Listening to Brain Salad and feeling pretty bummed.

  • Suddenly I had this Queen song playing in my head. Weird, it really seems to be a year where more legends are dying than usual. Keith was a true genius! RIP.

  • One word: Tarkus.

  • He may be gone, but the Show never ends.

  • Even though keyboards are not my first instrument, Keith Emerson was a huge influence and the music of The Nice and ELP filled my early Prog life with wonder.
    I was lucky enough to see ELP in Manchester at their zenith and it is something I will never forget.
    This is my own little tribute...R.I.P Keith and thanks for the music and the showmanship!

  • Great track and a Nice tribute (see what I did there....)

  • @AlterEgo_UK -- outstanding track...all of it really works!

    Keith Emerson's death hit me pretty hard...much harder than any celebrity death since John Lennon. But these two men sit at the very top of my list so...not unexpected I guess. Still, I thought I was too old to cry like a baby over something like this.

    However, AlterEgo', your song, Elegy for Keith, just gave me a really nice heal. I've been reading some nice comments and personal stories around the webs, and I've heard some other cool new music this evening, but this heartfelt tribute was like...I dunno, a warm blanket, but better. It made me feel good...so, thanks for a sweet tribute to my hero.

  • Hearing Emerson, Lake, and Palmer for the first time opened the ears of the world to a sound unlike anything ever heard before. If it had just been the fusion of rock with elements of jazz and classical music, that would have been mind-blowing in itself. But it was also the first time the synthesizer was a prominently featured instrument in rock. Just as a few years earlier when Hendrix and Cream had completely changed the sound of rock with distortion and guitar pedals, the world was utterly transformed again when it heard the Moog synthesizer solo at the end of Lucky Man.
    On top of this was ELP's stage showmanship, which featured Emerson surrounded by keyboards and towering machines tangled in patch cords and knobs, as if from the laboratory of a mad scientist, and a quadraphonic sound system that spun the sound around the four corners of a stadium. Some called him the Jimi Hendrix of the keyboard, because he helped to redefine the boundaries of his instrument. In Emerson's case his instrument was often the massive Hammond organ, a beast he would slay with not only virtuoso playing technique, but by playing it backwards, stabbing it with knives, leaping over it, and hurling it around the stage to create feedback and the sounds of air raid sirens and bombs exploding.
    To the kids growing up in the early 70s, no one could have ever imagined that they were in the midst of a great cosmic expansion of musical innovation the likes of which the world may never know again. The few short years of the early 70s faded fast, and time continues to snuff out the lights of its brightest stars. But somewhere in this infinite expanding universe there will always be a stadium forever resonating with the exploding sound of Keith Emerson's keyboards. RIP, Maestro.

  • @Lady_App_titude Good and heartfelt stuff.

  • I remember him playing that piano that would spin around in the air!

  • Great photo, @Lady_App_titude. Captures the vibe oh so well.

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