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Comments
I'm a trumpet player and Clifford is probably my favourite jazz trumpet player.
I'd have the composer Gustav Mahler back for questioning.
And dead at 25. Just think...
a little voice inside my head said you can never look back, you can never look back
Elliot Smith
Lol good catch!
As much teasing myself with that one. My favorite record of theirs is The Name of This Band Is Talking Heads and still I almost always say THE Talking Heads.
A little unfair on him - he was ahead of the curve on the whole alt-folk thing, Mojave 3 were playing acoustic guitars about 10 years before it became fashionable again. Sleeping On Roads was probably his first big success after Slowdive, and he deserved it. I've also really come to appreciate how good Slowdive were, a good 25 years too late. I think Neil Halstead has probably been underrated for most his career - I guess in that way he is a bit like Nick Drake
I’d likely go for Mozart.. the guy had so much more incredible work to do , and was taken from us at a much too early age.
I’d normally pick John Lennon though, for someone in the last century. I used to fantasize about him reincarnating or speaking through me when I write — as weird as that sounds
.. he’s always been my prime inspiration and muse.
At least I did get to see him live many many times. Favourite incarnations for me we’re New York Gong, Divided Alien Playbax 80 & greatest of all Planet Gong.
Ah wonderful. Didn’t see any of those incarnations, narrowly missed the Planet Gong show that was recorded but saw him loads of times solo and with Gong. My mate helped put on gigs for him for his 80’s UK ‘return’, and I got to meet him a few times when I looked after the Gong website, after their webmaster went AWOL.
Wonderfully creative bloke, a real inspiration in my life.
I saw that Fad Gadget you mentioned too once, cutting his head open on a syndrum.
Cool, never saw Fad Gadget so am well jealous of that. Along with Nag Nag Nag from that era Fireside Favourites is still one of my favourite ever tracks. Am sussing it out to play myself.
Newsreel has always been a favourite of mine. Haven't played it for ages...must do that now...
Yea great track
Insecticide - played loud - awesome
Back on track with the thread - Robert Calvert
Agreed. Two Stones in My Pocket is one of my favourite seems-to-be-on-every-slow-mix songs ever....
I didn't mean it as a diss. I love that record (and slowdive and m3 and nick drake). When you're doing something that good, wearing your influences on your sleeve can work wonderfully.
Hopefully next time he could find an audience for this sooner.
I can’t only choose one, but my no 1 is:
Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus (Gottlieb, Amade, Ama Deus) Mozart
I’d also like Clara Schumann back, the best Pianist of the 19 century.
and of course Gustav Mahler, to finish his 10th, properly.
I just had a Mahler weekend at my manor. Very successful. I got to read the facsimile of the unfinished 10th symphony. And we listened to the whole gigantic 2nd Resurrection Symphony. Perhaps the most marvellous piece of musical art written.
But one can always argue
Randy Rhoads
Been playing that a lot over the last week or so.
I’d have to choose an artist that was actually delivering top-notch material at the time of his passing, so I’m going to say Al Bowlly.
A truly addictive album, great for remapping the brain.
Haha, an interesting caveat, I just assumed the artist in their prime and not drooling on their deathbed only to die again five minutes later of another problem.
Well, Prince was my first thought. But honestly, his last decent record was 3121, which came out in 2006. May he Rest In Peace.
Django
Mozart is an obvious choice, but he'd probably die again of culture shock. Leonard Bernstein's great mind... I think he'd be bitter. Vladimir Horowitz died way too young. Coltrane didn't live half as long. Hendrix would be fun. How many more great songs would the Beatles write if brought back at the height of their collective energy? Seems unfair to pick just one, but selfishly... Bananarama '84.