8mh solo
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blckout420
8mh solo
Hi everybody. I'm a little late but I just discovered this forum. But I see familiar people here...
Ok, topic for discussion. I have heard this several times before, and have always wondered about it.The Eight Miles High solo rumor. I heard once on a radio trivia contest that it was done originally in the session by Glen Campbell.(the winning answer) Seems far fetched, but also possible.Anybody ever heard this before? Or am I being totally blasphemous?
Ok, topic for discussion. I have heard this several times before, and have always wondered about it.The Eight Miles High solo rumor. I heard once on a radio trivia contest that it was done originally in the session by Glen Campbell.(the winning answer) Seems far fetched, but also possible.Anybody ever heard this before? Or am I being totally blasphemous?
Never happened ,RM was emulating the sounds of the valves opening and closing on a alto saxaphone .He and the Cros were listening to a lot of Ravi Shankar and John Coltrane.
Roger's playing, was these two styles thrown into the blender and spit back at the world in McGuinn fashion.
The first session guy was Clarence White and he played on Younger than Yesterday.
The next guy was Hugh Masakela on 'So you Want to be a Rock and Roll Star.'
Hugh got the nod after the Monterey Festival and played the 'real ' trumpet solo
Roger's playing, was these two styles thrown into the blender and spit back at the world in McGuinn fashion.
The first session guy was Clarence White and he played on Younger than Yesterday.
The next guy was Hugh Masakela on 'So you Want to be a Rock and Roll Star.'
Hugh got the nod after the Monterey Festival and played the 'real ' trumpet solo
So you too want yours "ALAPWOB"?!?!
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Don Miller
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 99
- Joined: Tue Dec 05, 2000 9:43 am
Don you could be correct on that ,I did not look it up ...figured you or Tomcat would know that one ,and when Clarence first soloed on YTY
I think it was on 'Time Between'
At last I can find out which Coltrane disc to get and where the 'influence ' is from ...thanks Don Miller.You didn't happen to drive a Ford Falcon in the early 1970's did you ?
I think it was on 'Time Between'
At last I can find out which Coltrane disc to get and where the 'influence ' is from ...thanks Don Miller.You didn't happen to drive a Ford Falcon in the early 1970's did you ?
So you too want yours "ALAPWOB"?!?!
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Don Miller
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 99
- Joined: Tue Dec 05, 2000 9:43 am
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Don Miller
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 99
- Joined: Tue Dec 05, 2000 9:43 am
No, Mark, you must be thinking of the red Falcon wagon we had at the resort[a '68]. Remember,
"ta-da-Dump, ta-da-Dump, Ta-Da Dump, Dump Dump"...
and one red tractor. Oh, where was I? Oh, yeah,Thanks, Don Miller, I knew that "Impressions"
and "India" were related there somewhere.Geez, Imagine, riding in a Winnebago in late '65,
with a reel to reel run thru a Showman amp, with Coltrane and Ravi Shankar on endless replay,
with Croz' endless supply of Acapulco Gold, or whatever, oh, man.Must have been quite the scene.
"ta-da-Dump, ta-da-Dump, Ta-Da Dump, Dump Dump"...
and one red tractor. Oh, where was I? Oh, yeah,Thanks, Don Miller, I knew that "Impressions"
and "India" were related there somewhere.Geez, Imagine, riding in a Winnebago in late '65,
with a reel to reel run thru a Showman amp, with Coltrane and Ravi Shankar on endless replay,
with Croz' endless supply of Acapulco Gold, or whatever, oh, man.Must have been quite the scene.
The influence that led to this great song is most interesting. This is a great bit of lead work on a 12-string to be sure. Does anyone know if it was done in real time or if it was sped up to some extent? I am not suggesting that Roger couldn't play this with his eyes closed, but I am curious as to whether we have any additional information from the sound engineer or Roger himself that has been made public.
Life, as with music, often requires one to let go of the melody and listen to the rhythm
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blckout420
My band has played this song for years. When we learned it , the hardest thing was getting the slopbucket rythmn part. These guys must have been so freaking stoned when they recorded it! Ya gotta love it!
At one point I used to play the solo note for note (now we go crazy when we play it!). It was the strangest guitar solo I ever learned.
At one point I used to play the solo note for note (now we go crazy when we play it!). It was the strangest guitar solo I ever learned.
The first version of the song was recorded by the Byrds on 12/22/65 at RCA studios, but wasn't officially released because of their recording contract with Columbia Records. This first, slower, raw, opium-like version showed up on the bootleg "Never Before", but was never trully released until the 20-bit remastered version appeared on Columbia's 1996 reissue of Fifth Dimension. It's worth hearing if you haven't already.
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Rob_Ashford
