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I'm tellin you man, Leftovers, alien abduction, god went crate digging again, or he joined a good band.
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Ultimate BOD (Band of the Dead)
Jeff Healey - Lead guitar
Tom Petty - Rhythm guitar
Phil Lynott - Bass guitar.
Keith Moon - Drums
...and Keith Emerson or Jon Lord on keys?
Ultimate BOD:
Jimi Hendrix - guitar
Mitch Mitchell - drums
Noel Redding - bass
.......wait a second......
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Both great. Would personally prefer Lord.
I think he'd fit in with the others better.
Watching the Netflix documentary. Really good and recommended. 4hrs
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Yeah, we saw that one a while ago. Will like,y watch it again. Really good insight into the life, times, music and motivations of TP.
I've got the Travelling Wilburys box set here which has a nice documentary DVD, will give that a spin later.
Bring 'em out, fellas - let's give old Tom the send off he deserves!
I've seen it already too. Just watched the whole 4hrs again. Not bored yet.
I didn’t know Jeff Healey died, when was that? He was amazing, haven’t thought about him in a long time.
For anyone with Sling TV, and any other options that carry the network, there's a Tom Petty show on AXS TV right now called Live From Gatorville. If you catch it on Sling you can start it from the beginning. It's likely to be on repeat later too, but I can't say that for sure.
AXS is a weird little channel. As an example later tonight they have an hour long interview of Carlos Santana. It will be Dan Rather doing the interview, which seems odd, but he tends to have a high regard for rock musicians. Later on tonight AXS is running the Woodstock documentary, which I might watch again, depending on my mood and my ability to focus.
Now it's back to the Tom Petty live show. Just for the record, he does seem to officially be dead now, so the live show isn't actually live. It's great that he was doing shows just last week so he was still playing live up until the end of the line. When I go I'd like to go out playing live, like Johnny Guitar Watson or Country Dick Montana.
Throw in Franz Liszt on keyboard...
I will really miss Tom Petty - this is a sad day for music
RIP man... jam forever with all the other greats in our musicians heaven
You know what album of his is my favorite? Southern Accents. Really enjoyed that one from start to finish today.
I was jamming that one today as well, that and the Wilburys...
Here's a 24-minute Wilburys mini-doc in case you haven't seen it. Dylan acting like he's cooler than everyone else, Orbison nailing vocal tracks, Harrison being level-headed, Lynne knowing he's just lucky to be there, and Tom Petty plain holdin' it down.
It's great - watched it a while back but due for a revisit.
Man, to be a fly on the wall...
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He died in 2008, at just 41.
When I go I'd like to go out playing live, like Johnny Guitar Watson or Country Dick Montana.
There was a very famous British comedian, named Tommy Cooper, who I recall watching on an evening live TV variety show. Toward the end of his act, he kind of sighed theatrically (which he did anyway) and fell to the floor. After a few seconds the stage curtains whizzed across, just leaving a foot sticking out, which appeared to be quite funny.
Only later did we realise that he’d died for real, doing what he loved and entertaining millions.
The Good Death. Rarely achieved.
Marty Stuart is one of those country cats that I just have heaps of respect for...and my country leanings are very selective. Willie's "Red Headed Stranger" album, Waylon Jennings, Danny Gatton's country/jazz/rockabilly hybrids, etc. New country by and large is rock/pop from 25 years ago with pedal steel & tear in beer lyrics.
I listened to "Full Moon Fever" yesterday and some of "Into The Great Wide Open". Petty was on fire as a songwriter in that period. Some deride the Jeff Lynne production but I always dug Lynne anyway.
RIP Tom Petty
Some days I love Austin.
http://music.blog.austin360.com/2017/10/07/heres-why-you-just-saw-skydivers-at-acl-fest/
Someone was saying Lynne was lucky to be in the Travelling Wilburys. I always though he was totally deserving. The better ELO stuff sounded exactly like a continuation of The Beatles, yet not a copy. Lynne also brought out the best in anyone he produced, and worked so well with Petty.
Jeff was the one with the necessary "discipline" to provide some needed structure to the Wilburys. Definitely the glue in that project connecting all the disparate elements.
Exactly. Throughout the 1970's there are quotes from Lennon, Harrison, etc. putting over Lynne & ELO...they liked his stuff and saw it as the road continuing from I Am The Walrus, etc. which the Beatles themselves U-turned away from with The White Album.
Petty's "Full Moon Fever" & the next Heartbreakers record, George's "Cloud 9", the "new" Beatles Anthology cuts and McCartney's"Flaming Pie" are all produced Jeff Lynne. They obviously appreciated his "sound" and his production acumen.
And the "Lynne sound" derision is a cop out because acts like Crowded House, Squeeze, etc. also used very spiky, airy acoustic guitar beds and had very stylized, pronounced snare drums. If anything it's a period thing. But I always dug it because the snare just has such weight & focus. A track like "Free As A Bird" has this cannon like snare, which again, similar to how Charlie Watts snare sound is.
And as @Zen210507 said, watch that Wilbury's documentary, or the one with him & Petty from years ago and you see Lynne as this energetic, supportive force. I wish I had that during sessions, an honest voice in the room who gives great feedback & motivation.
Band of the dead, isn't that the Stones, no sorry The Living Dead.
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That last Glastonbury performance looked exactly like a Wonga commercial.