@@gelubatir9794 I'mJapan of MoriKawa. argas.four.there's rub. new England.live date2. these albums I like special! I chase w Ash from 50 years a go! (at the same time I like heart😊Renaissance curved air)exsucuse! today this end! see you again maybe# good luck!
I'm 66 years old and STILL a fan of these guys. I've BEEN a fan for 50 years. They're the best kept secret in the world of rock music, and one of the top bands in the world!!
Hallo, I'm 65 y. young and love this band since 1970, I'm so glad to have the original first 4 Albums and "Live Dates1" till today in my vinyl collection and nothing lost of the magic, keep on rockin', "Jogi" from Germany, Berlin
I'm late fifties... that means nothing except that I wanted to list my age. I had not listened to the Ash and I consider it a highlight of the last 50 years.
Argus was the first album I ever bought. That was back in 1973. 46 years later it is still one of the finest albums I've ever heard. I NEVER tire of hearing it's beautiful haunting melodies and it's superb musicianship.
I saw Ash several times during the 70's at the legendary Glasgow Apollo, the first time in 76 cost me £1.30, the gigs were always fantastic. At almost every Ash gig at the Apollo there was a white sheet with 'ASH' written in red I think hung from one of the 'royal boxes' to stage left and after the show the band would bow to the flag! Great days, great gigs & memories, great music.
James Allison that was also my first WA gig🙂 Also saw them there on subsequent tours up until 1980’s Just Testing tour. Amazing venue. Amazing band and still one of my favourites.
... and one thing I forgot to add ... Throw Down The Sword is the finest close-out of any album I've ever heard. It winds down a fantastic album BRILLIANTLY
Martin Turner's Thunderbird bass is sounding mighty fine on this recording. Damn! And what a lead vocalist he is. Great harmony vocals, back when singers actually had to hit notes using their talent, instead of auto tune. So much good music back then. Thank you for posting NDF! Props to you on your fine collection of 60'sand 70's magic. The best of times.
I was 14 years old first heard Wishbone Ash. I had a guitar but I didn't play it. I didn't know how and then my mom moved us to another town into an apartment and I was on the balcony strumming this out-of-tune 5 string guitar. A tall lanky Italian guy named Bob was walking by and told me to stop that racket or or he would come up there and show me how to play. That was the best day of my life. He started showing me errors of my way by Wishbone Ash. He wouldn't let me hear the song Until I learned how to play it and that was magic to me. Now I'm 64 and I've been playing all of my life. I've seen Wishbone Ash about 15 times in my life. Martin Turner and Ted Turner and Andy Powell were my heroes in the guitar realm. But then Steve Upton! I realized what a fantastic and unparalleled drummer he was. Have a great day y'all
@@josephtravers777 Good ears, Joseph! The bass truly does sound like a ricky in many places. Is it possible he gigged two different axes here? Sure sounds like a T Bird on Throw Down the Sword, at least. Although I was, and still am a huge fan of the early band's incarnation, I never knew Martin had played anything but a T Bird. Beastly, neck heavy axe to play, incidentally. But back then ya had to have one in the stable. The weight distribution actually made moving around on a stage considerably easier. The neck's weight always seemed to want to pull ya.
@@CowabungaSurfaris Not sure but the Argus LP sounds 100% Ricky. Especially that growl during the beginning of the wah solo. The longer scale Gibbys were notorious for nosedives. Slows down the left hand because you have to prop it up while you play. Sold a '71 EB-0L for that very reason. Identical to the one Phil Lesh played before the Alembic bass.
I have been a W.A. fan since 1974. I first saw the band live at the Tower Theater, Upper Darby, Pa. ( next to Philadelphia) on the," There's the Rub tour," with Caravan opener ( their Cunning Stunts tour!) in November, 1974. I didn't get to see W.A. again until 2009! I met Ted Turner and Andy Powell at a R+R convention at Valley Forge, 1992. I love the reunion years albums- Nouveau Calls Hear to Hear Strange Affair Ash live in Chicago. I like that latest 50th aniv album.... I would love to get the massive box set one of these days! BTW, I also like Martin's band...
Wow. Some 50 years ago, I recorded this off the radio onto a cassette player . Here it is sounding wonderful. That's not nostalgia talking, it really is great music. They rocked!
There has just been a massive Twitter poll of the most underrated Rock band of all time ... amongst the front runners were Creedance Clearwater Revival, Free, ELO, Rory Gallacher & the "winner" was Blue Oyster Cult (surprising but well deserved) .... I was amazed that I don't think anyone mentioned Wishbone Ash at all ... their concerts up to 1980 (when Martin left) were always stunning & several of their albums between the debut in 1970 to Just Testing in 1980 are fantastic ...i think the later split into 2 acts has hurt their legacy to some degree ..
Wisbone wasnt marketing conception. not following trends, like, u know, DP or freinds. Just playing music. Truly. As fuck. :) Its a shame, we are few people, not a legion. Mass media. fkuct it at all. and really deep. :)
Typically great performance by Turner/Turner/Powell/Upton of some of their finest songs ... highly likely that if you saw them in concert between 1970-80 that they were brilliant (till Martin left in 1981 & the magic ended for a while) ...
@@dennismurphy2979 Does Ted Turner sing lead on “Blowin’ Free” here, or is it Martins voice? On another YT vid I could have sworn Ted’s singing lead on BF.
Time was, discovered Wishbone Ash, Argus album first,then Pilgrimage, well; time doesn't age these absolute classic albums; Argus standing tall amongst the greatest of guitar dominated Rock albums.
Thanks for uploading - superb band, playing a great set, excellent sound - wish I had seen them live around this time, but I was only 12! Had to make do with Live Dates....
Very late to the party for Wishbone Ash, just discovering their music. Oh well, better late than never as they say. ❤. I feel like the magical-mystical song “Blowin’ Free” was written about lil’ ole me; “Her hair was golden brown, blowin’ free like a cornfield, she was far away, I found it hard to reach her, she told me you can try, but it’s impossible to find her.” I’m an “Enigma”…✌️
Wishbone Ash es un platillo selecto , fueron grandiosos toda la decada de los 70 , a principios de los 80' empezaron los cambios de integrantes , su ultimo album magnifico fue "Just testing" de 1980 , despues de eso ya no fue lo mismo , aunque hay muy buenos albums , lo mejor es toda su discografia de los 70 !!
@@KittyGrizGriz 😂😂😂😂 , on your cell phone , youtube has it's own translator , but , basically , I recommend you that listen to Wishbone Ash' entire discography from the 70's and until the mid-80's .
Ah, the way I remember it, complete with the Bob Harris introductions. I saw the band 4 times, including their headlining at the Reading Festival in August 1975. Good times. :-)
I saw WA in 1973 in Portland, Oregon. I hardly knew who they were but went with some buddies. It was magical! They did pretty much the Live Dates show. I went and bought their first 3 albums and then Live Dates. Been hooked ever since. Love Martin's bass on this recording!
When I was 13 it was concerts every weekend. But I have to say I've never seen these guys. But I wish I had.Living in southeast florida in the 70s was awesome. Thank you to all my friends. Without them I doubt I'd be alive today. Stupid things we do when we were teenager's.
Saw them in Edinburgh in the early 1970's have a few of their albums in my attic. Wish I could remember more about the concert but had a j or two or was it three. Happy days great band great music thanks for this.
My uncle turned me on to them when I was about 12 and I still think they are as solid as they were back then. Got to see them 3 times met them in 2005 in Scranton pa at the moonshine theater for the ash fest convention and had my wishbone 4 8 track tape signed great memories
Let’s see… I graduated high school in 1973 and I had already been worshipping Andy Powell about a year prior, so the date checks out. lol…. In 1976, when I formed my own hard rock group “Loaded Dice” I made sure Blowin’ Free was always in the first set, so I’m sure I’ve played it like 500 times.
I love Blowin’ Free song, it’s so powerful in a subdued sort of way. Lots of truths unfolded in the lyrics. That’s so wonderful you play live music! It’s a great outlet! When I was barely 18 I started venturing to live rock n roll venues, with the “Tulsa Sound” ❤ in the background. ❤
@@KittyGrizGriz I must have listened to their album "Live Dates" dozens and dozens of times back in those days. In fact and coincidentally, I just listened to it again earlier this year. Yep. Its as good as I remembered it. Wishbone Ash was a huge part of my guitar formative years.
I played with my Band Throw down the sword in 1974, later in 1978 and 2005 Jailbait- String bending I learned from Andy Powell s playing. . Make own songs in the style of Ash, with the twice lines of melodies. Argus is evergreen! Never grow old.
Magical night at the Warehouse in New orleans, they played all this and i was fueled by chocolate mescaline.... best concert of my life...captain beyond opened, rhino was amazing too
FYI, the "Live Dates" album was recorded after the release of Argus in late '73. For me it is the best live album only to share accolades with The Allman Bros. Fillmore East album. If I understand it correctly, WA was recording the Live Dates as they were writing and recording and performing bits of Argus, as they had it worked out. Which is why Live Dates was released so soon after Argus.
😍💣🙏🏻 47 years and THE Warrior King returned LIKE A Phoenix from their ASH-es🙏🏻😍👍.....one big love was with me when we enjoyed this & each others 🙏🏻thanks for the MEMORIES 😍🙏🏻
Best version of Phoenix ever, I remember listening to this broadcast live after having seen them live a couple of times. Brilliant. After seeing Andy Powell I HAD to get a Flying V. Saved up and got a 67 V, cost me £395 back in '72. Still got it.
Tenho todos os discos da carreira. Confesso que não conhecia esta gravação nem sei se existe em disco mas penso que não. Talvez um bootleg. De qualquer maneira é mais um trabalho brilhante desta fantástica banda. Rock on
I recorded this concert on cassette from a radio station in Detroit back in the 70s. I'm so happy to hear such a clean version of this recording. Thanks for posting.
Same here. A few decades ago I said to my dad "I wish that Iron Maiden had an album only of extended melodic riffs and guitar harmonies". Well, I found that direct from Wishbone Ash. B)
I first saw Wishbone Ash in Spring 1980 & Iron Maiden in Autumn 1980 at the same local hall, both bands (along with BOC) the best live concerts i've seen. fabulous musicians/performers.
As a guitarist have always cracked on about Powell and Turner but it has to be said that the rhythm section was awesome Steve Uptons drumming should be right up there
I saw them play twice, once at The Marquee with Vinegar Joe (Elkie Brooks and Robert Palmer) and at The Ally Palace. Fabulous band that peaked with Argus.
@@nekochan1692 Thanks for sharing how you achieved it. As they say.......You learn somethiing new every day. I´m a curious sort of person, but I´ve never thought of Googling a question on that one. 👍
No one ever seems to comment on the track pilgrim from the 2nd album, I don't know what they were on when they wrote it but it must gave been some good stuff.
Wishbone Ash - 1972 BBC Bass Guitar, Vocals - Martin Turner Drums, Percussion - Steve Upton Guitar, Vocals, Rhythm Guitar - Andy Powell, Ted Turner 00:00 - Time Was 10:16 - Blowin' Free 16:07 - Warrior 21:50 - Throw Down The Sword 28:39 - The King Will Come 36:51 - Phoenix
Last time I saw Ash it was in the cavern liverpool small venue but nice elegantly there music will say in my mind it gets to you that's got to be good from the French man
Timecode:
00:00 - Time Was
10:16 - Blowin' Free
16:07 - Warrior
21:50 - Throw Down The Sword
28:39 - The King Will Come
36:51 - Phoenix
Thanks t bo. I pinned your timecode.
@@NonDirectionalFilms It's me who shall thank you for opening this true band for me! :pray:
Sometime World was on the original broadcast and was missing from this CD, I have a poor recording of it
Bass Guitar, Vocals - Martin Turner
Drums, Percussion - Steve Upton
Guitar, Vocals, Rhythm Guitar - Andy Powell, Ted Turner
@@gelubatir9794 I'mJapan of MoriKawa.
argas.four.there's rub.
new England.live date2.
these albums I like special! I chase w Ash
from 50 years a go!
(at the same time I like
heart😊Renaissance curved air)exsucuse!
today this end!
see you again maybe#
good luck!
I'm 66 years old and STILL a fan of these guys. I've BEEN a fan for 50 years. They're the best kept secret in the world of rock music, and one of the top bands in the world!!
Special band.
VERY special. Some of the most talented musicians I have EVER heard. I'd give almost anything to be able to play like Andy Powell.
Hallo, I'm 65 y. young and love this band since 1970, I'm so glad to have the original first 4 Albums and "Live Dates1" till today in my vinyl collection and nothing lost of the magic, keep on rockin', "Jogi" from Germany, Berlin
I'm 65 and agree!
I'm late fifties... that means nothing except that I wanted to list my age. I had not listened to the Ash and I consider it a highlight of the last 50 years.
Argus was the first album I ever bought. That was back in 1973. 46 years later it is still one of the finest albums I've ever heard. I NEVER tire of hearing it's beautiful haunting melodies and it's superb musicianship.
Legendary Twin Guitar Players who were way Ahead of their time. Andy Powell & Ted Turner were absolute Superb Musicians
I saw Ash several times during the 70's at the legendary Glasgow Apollo, the first time in 76 cost me £1.30, the gigs were always fantastic. At almost every Ash gig at the Apollo there was a white sheet with 'ASH' written in red I think hung from one of the 'royal boxes' to stage left and after the show the band would bow to the flag! Great days, great gigs & memories, great music.
James Allison that was also my first WA gig🙂 Also saw them there on subsequent tours up until 1980’s Just Testing tour. Amazing venue. Amazing band and still one of my favourites.
Ah, the legendary Apollo. The balcony was scary, it used to physically move.
i began to draw thanks the cover
... and one thing I forgot to add ... Throw Down The Sword is the finest close-out of any album I've ever heard. It winds down a fantastic album BRILLIANTLY
Sublime musicianship. If only the bands of today would listen to this, they could learn so much
i am 71 and saw this band sometime in the 1970's and still am knocked over by the music.
This is one band that was a hidden gem in the progressive movement of great musical acts!
Martin Turner's Thunderbird bass is sounding mighty fine on this recording. Damn! And what a lead vocalist he is. Great harmony vocals, back when singers actually had to hit notes using their talent, instead of auto tune. So much good music back then. Thank you for posting NDF! Props to you on your fine collection of 60'sand 70's magic. The best of times.
Thanks my friend
I was 14 years old first heard Wishbone Ash. I had a guitar but I didn't play it. I didn't know how and then my mom moved us to another town into an apartment and I was on the balcony strumming this out-of-tune 5 string guitar. A tall lanky Italian guy named Bob was walking by and told me to stop that racket or or he would come up there and show me how to play. That was the best day of my life. He started showing me errors of my way by Wishbone Ash. He wouldn't let me hear the song Until I learned how to play it and that was magic to me. Now I'm 64 and I've been playing all of my life. I've seen Wishbone Ash about 15 times in my life. Martin Turner and Ted Turner and Andy Powell were my heroes in the guitar realm. But then Steve Upton! I realized what a fantastic and unparalleled drummer he was. Have a great day y'all
I believe this is still the Ricky, before he changed to Gibby. Vaguely remember seeing them around this time but it was a very long time ago.
@@josephtravers777 Good ears, Joseph! The bass truly does sound like a ricky in many places. Is it possible he gigged two different axes here? Sure sounds like a T Bird on Throw Down the Sword, at least. Although I was, and still am a huge fan of the early band's incarnation, I never knew Martin had played anything but a T Bird. Beastly, neck heavy axe to play, incidentally. But back then ya had to have one in the stable. The weight distribution actually made moving around on a stage considerably easier. The neck's weight always seemed to want to pull ya.
@@CowabungaSurfaris Not sure but the Argus LP sounds 100% Ricky. Especially that growl during the beginning of the wah solo. The longer scale Gibbys were notorious for nosedives. Slows down the left hand because you have to prop it up while you play. Sold a '71 EB-0L for that very reason. Identical to the one Phil Lesh played before the Alembic bass.
I have been a W.A. fan since 1974. I first saw the band live at the Tower Theater, Upper Darby, Pa. ( next to Philadelphia) on the," There's the Rub tour," with Caravan opener ( their Cunning Stunts tour!) in November, 1974. I didn't get to see W.A. again until 2009!
I met Ted Turner and Andy Powell at a R+R convention at Valley Forge, 1992. I love the reunion years albums-
Nouveau Calls
Hear to Hear
Strange Affair
Ash live in Chicago.
I like that latest 50th aniv album....
I would love to get the massive box set one of these days!
BTW, I also like Martin's band...
Wow. Some 50 years ago, I recorded this off the radio onto a cassette player . Here it is sounding wonderful. That's not nostalgia talking, it really is great music. They rocked!
The most underrated band of the 70's.
real music fans know they are great still much loved
WisdomShared Cheyenne ii
There has just been a massive Twitter poll of the most underrated Rock band of all time ... amongst the front runners were Creedance Clearwater Revival, Free, ELO, Rory Gallacher & the "winner" was Blue Oyster Cult (surprising but well deserved) .... I was amazed that I don't think anyone mentioned Wishbone Ash at all ... their concerts up to 1980 (when Martin left) were always stunning & several of their albums between the debut in 1970 to Just Testing in 1980 are fantastic ...i think the later split into 2 acts has hurt their legacy to some degree ..
Wisbone wasnt marketing conception. not following trends, like, u know, DP or freinds. Just playing music. Truly. As fuck. :) Its a shame, we are
few people, not a legion. Mass media. fkuct it at all. and really deep. :)
I think the most underrated bands were Thin Lizzy, Rory Gallagher, and maybe Uriah Heep, there's more.
Typically great performance by Turner/Turner/Powell/Upton of some of their finest songs ... highly likely that if you saw them in concert between 1970-80 that they were brilliant (till Martin left in 1981 & the magic ended for a while) ...
OMG ! I can’t get enough of Wishbone !
Brilliant band. Just played their first LP at home today. Nothing beats old WA. :))))))
Pilgrimage?
@@deltadesign5697 Wishbone Ash is the 1st LP. Pilgrimage is the 2nd. Both great.
That's the most pronounced bass I've heard on any live recording of Wishbone Ash...Sizzzzzzling
Love that bass sound, very clear and UPFRONT, favorite instrument.
Martin Turner 4-ever 🎸
Martin's Wishbone is better than Andy's imo
@@dennismurphy2979 Does Ted Turner sing lead on “Blowin’ Free” here, or is it Martins voice? On another YT vid I could have sworn Ted’s singing lead on BF.
I don't know the answer to that, however I saw a spectacular show June 73' at the Chicago Auditorium when the band was at it's peak
Time was, discovered Wishbone Ash, Argus album first,then Pilgrimage, well; time doesn't age these absolute classic albums; Argus standing tall amongst the greatest of guitar dominated Rock albums.
Thanks for uploading - superb band, playing a great set, excellent sound - wish I had seen them live around this time, but I was only 12! Had to make do with Live Dates....
Very late to the party for Wishbone Ash, just discovering their music. Oh well, better late than never as they say. ❤. I feel like the magical-mystical song “Blowin’ Free” was written about lil’ ole me;
“Her hair was golden brown, blowin’ free like a cornfield, she was far away, I found it hard to reach her, she told me you can try, but it’s impossible to find her.”
I’m an “Enigma”…✌️
Never too late to love good music, mate. Welcome.
Wishbone Ash es un platillo selecto , fueron grandiosos toda la decada de los 70 , a principios de los 80' empezaron los cambios de integrantes , su ultimo album magnifico fue "Just testing" de 1980 , despues de eso ya no fue lo mismo , aunque hay muy buenos albums , lo mejor es toda su discografia de los 70 !!
@@SerafinRubato I wish I could read what you’re saying here, darn it. 😃
@@KittyGrizGriz 😂😂😂😂 , on your cell phone , youtube has it's own translator , but , basically , I recommend you that listen to Wishbone Ash' entire discography from the 70's and until the mid-80's .
@@SerafinRubatoHaha thank you! I swear “Translate to English” wasn’t there when I posted that, so weird.
These guys' playing inspired me to take up the guitar. Still playing now 50 year later. I was able to tell Andy Powell this when we met.
Cool story !!!! ❤🎉😅
ARGUS IS JUST SO AMAZING
Ah, the way I remember it, complete with the Bob Harris introductions.
I saw the band 4 times, including their headlining at the Reading Festival in August 1975. Good times. :-)
I saw WA in 1973 in Portland, Oregon. I hardly knew who they were but went with some buddies. It was magical! They did pretty much the Live Dates show. I went and bought their first 3 albums and then Live Dates. Been hooked ever since. Love Martin's bass on this recording!
When I was 13 it was concerts every weekend. But I have to say I've never seen these guys. But I wish I had.Living in southeast florida in the 70s was awesome. Thank you to all my friends. Without them I doubt I'd be alive today. Stupid things we do when we were teenager's.
Excellent performance and a great recording. Pure honest rock that chills to the bone :-)
I seen this band live, duelling lead guitarists, best concert ever.
Seen them several times, first time in 1972 at the melody maker poll concert when they won with Argus, still listening magic band
I saw these guys in '74 at a small college venue - one the best concerts I've had the privilege to attend ~ superb musicianship!
Wish I had seen them then. Good on you.
That must've been my college.
saw them at UMBC most of the show from right behind the band thanks to the wraparound 2nd deck cool beans
@@MrErtunc Rock Valley College?
@@billcain9249 I was there, too. Sat on the floor about 10 feet from the stage.
Saw them in Edinburgh in the early 1970's have a few of their albums in my attic. Wish I could remember more about the concert but had a j or two or was it three. Happy days great band great music thanks for this.
pilgrimage album hooked me on the twin leads and great vocals bass and drums
My uncle turned me on to them when I was about 12 and I still think they are as solid as they were back then. Got to see them 3 times met them in 2005 in Scranton pa at the moonshine theater for the ash fest convention and had my wishbone 4 8 track tape signed great memories
Let’s see… I graduated high school in 1973 and I had already been worshipping Andy Powell about a year prior, so the date checks out. lol…. In 1976, when I formed my own hard rock group “Loaded Dice” I made sure Blowin’ Free was always in the first set, so I’m sure I’ve played it like 500 times.
I love Blowin’ Free song, it’s so powerful in a subdued sort of way. Lots of truths unfolded in the lyrics.
That’s so wonderful you play live music! It’s a great outlet! When I was barely 18 I started venturing to live rock n roll venues, with the “Tulsa Sound” ❤ in the background. ❤
@@KittyGrizGriz I must have listened to their album "Live Dates" dozens and dozens of times back in those days. In fact and coincidentally, I just listened to it again earlier this year. Yep. Its as good as I remembered it. Wishbone Ash was a huge part of my guitar formative years.
I played with my Band Throw down the sword in 1974, later in 1978 and 2005 Jailbait- String bending I learned from Andy Powell s playing. . Make own songs in the style of Ash, with the twice lines of melodies. Argus is evergreen! Never grow old.
Magical night at the Warehouse in New orleans, they played all this and i was fueled by chocolate mescaline.... best concert of my life...captain beyond opened, rhino was amazing too
Captain Beyond ....? fantastic. dug them too. And remember Jo Jo Gunn?
Wow two great bands. That must of been a great concert. They sure don’t have bands like that no more.
@@lorenzo6mmI absolutely love, Jo Jo Gunne, their song “Run Run Run” is so good
Amazing recording! This is the best I’ve ever heard them live. Is this available on vinyl?
FYI, the "Live Dates" album was recorded after the release of Argus in late '73. For me it is the best live album only to share accolades with The Allman Bros. Fillmore East album. If I understand it correctly, WA was recording the Live Dates as they were writing and recording and performing bits of Argus, as they had it worked out. Which is why Live Dates was released so soon after Argus.
39:27
amazing recording and performance..what a gem. many thanks
Martin’s voice is in top form tonight. I love the guy.❤
He is a gentleman, and always funny 😜
id like to know who could NOT like this
😍💣🙏🏻 47 years and THE Warrior King returned LIKE A Phoenix from their ASH-es🙏🏻😍👍.....one big love was with me when we enjoyed this & each others 🙏🏻thanks for the MEMORIES 😍🙏🏻
Best version of Phoenix ever, I remember listening to this broadcast live after having seen them live a couple of times. Brilliant. After seeing Andy Powell I HAD to get a Flying V. Saved up and got a 67 V, cost me £395 back in '72. Still got it.
Always wanted one. Thanks for the comment
Saw Wishbone Ash from the 2nd row just a couple of weeks ago. Definitely one of the all-time underrated bands.
Saw them several times in Memphis. Great band
Tenho todos os discos da carreira. Confesso que não conhecia esta gravação nem sei se existe em disco mas penso que não. Talvez um bootleg. De qualquer maneira é mais um trabalho brilhante desta fantástica banda. Rock on
Ash were headlining the first Open Air I ever attended as a 16 year-old back in Germany in 1976.
I recorded this concert on cassette from a radio station in Detroit back in the 70s.
I'm so happy to hear such a clean version of this recording.
Thanks for posting.
me too, WABX, maybe slightly before 1972, maybe not
We covered blind eye, too bad it wasn't included in this set
🙏🏻😍👍 WARRIOR'S IS STILL MY
FAVORITE 😍❗.....MAN...I DIDN'T LISTEN TO THIS...🤔 for...40 some years....🙏🏻THANKS to bring it back to me 🙏🏻
good sound, good band
Are Ted & Martin related? I love their taking turns on lead vocals, especially Ted Turners lead on “Blowin’ Free”🎙️🎶
Of course !!!! Here is the original line-up !!
Free trade hall Manchester 1972 first band l ever saw, Argus my 3rd favourite album of all time
Fell in love with this album, and all their early stuff in particular, love love them 🎶💕🎶
Rock got too girlie, then went out forever, their not even trying anymore
Iron Maiden delivered me here
Same here. A few decades ago I said to my dad "I wish that Iron Maiden had an album only of extended melodic riffs and guitar harmonies". Well, I found that direct from Wishbone Ash. B)
I first saw Wishbone Ash in Spring 1980 & Iron Maiden in Autumn 1980 at the same local hall, both bands (along with BOC) the best live concerts i've seen. fabulous musicians/performers.
No film? Just sound? I know, the sound is superb.....
Grand groupe. Throw down the sword est superbement joué !!
Loved this band
I saw these guys when I was a kid at an old theater in a small town in Ohio. Wooster.
I am fifty and have loved the album Argus since birth.
- Dad
I still have the albums Wishbone Four (my dad brought it back from London in 76), Argus and Live Dates.
Beethoven, Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Vivaldi, Wagner, Bach, Wishbone Ash...
nice
Wonderful concert, and such a good sound!
midiland yu
Sounds great!!
As a guitarist have always cracked on about Powell and Turner but it has to be said that the rhythm section was awesome Steve Uptons drumming should be right up there
I always felt like Built to Spill was really influenced by this band. My dad turned me onto Wishbone Ash and it always reminds me of him. Love em!
Artwork is Queen Maeve by J.C Leyendecker for those wondering 🤔
Thank you. Both that and the thumbnail were from my bookshelf
Comprei esses discos e não me separei mais da banda.fui no show Aki no opinião bar.gramde momento.
Uma banda muito top
Best thing my aunt introduced me to wishbone ash thanks aunt claire
⁹
I love this song. r forget the.person who put it in MY LIFE.
Crazy times couldn't teach anything to each other.
I’m 62 and they’re still the best!
I saw them play twice, once at The Marquee with Vinegar Joe (Elkie Brooks and Robert Palmer) and at The Ally Palace. Fabulous band that peaked with Argus.
The 70s rock scene was so much more than Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple and Black Sanbath. This is superb.
Esa es "La Santísima Trinidad del Hard Rock " , pero Wishbone Ash era mas selecto , para Reyes !!!
Grew up in the seventies but never listened to WA discoved late but love them
Love the picture too. Anyone know where it's from?
I searched it, its Queen Maeve by J.C Leyendecker 😎
@@nekochan1692 Brilliant. Thanks and well done!
@@leopolitan1914 wasnt easy I had to screenshot and crop it in photoshop, then ask google via reverse searching 🤔 Im surprised it actually found it.
@@nekochan1692 Thanks for sharing how you achieved it. As they say.......You learn somethiing new every day.
I´m a curious sort of person, but I´ve never thought of Googling a question on that one. 👍
I love it too! Am sharing it with my Artist son, it’s his hobby/outlet.
No one ever seems to comment on the track pilgrim from the 2nd album, I don't know what they were on when they wrote it but it must gave been some good stuff.
A thing of beauty.
WOW.... the sound quality of this is astounding.... 1972 ??? Anyone have any idea on what format this was recorded?
I've been here since 75. Always ashe
Great underappreciated artists.
Wishbone Ash - 1972 BBC Bass Guitar, Vocals - Martin Turner
Drums, Percussion - Steve Upton
Guitar, Vocals, Rhythm Guitar - Andy Powell, Ted Turner 00:00 - Time Was
10:16 - Blowin' Free
16:07 - Warrior
21:50 - Throw Down The Sword
28:39 - The King Will Come
36:51 - Phoenix
My first ever concert at Sheffield City Hall 1972 I think - brilliant and cant understand why they didnt make it big time
Bloody amazing!
great stuff from one of the most underrated bands of the sixties........they made superb music and "argus" is their masterpiece!!!!!!!!!!!
IF they were really underrated, then it was in the 70s!
Their music was way ahead of their time!
Ouvia direto isso nos anos 70..bolachão
Thanks, that's great ! :)
Just awesome
WishP eringBoB
12 of them
Wonderful!
this is beautiful
Beautiful !!!
Awesome memories!
Myself also. A wonderous time
🤘HeyNow ! ! ! ✌❤& Rock&Roll 😎
Yes me too I'm 64 you can't beat quality
a great band! during this time the best bands were born. all special and incomparably good.
THANK YOU!@!!
Last time I saw Ash it was in the cavern liverpool small venue but nice elegantly there music will say in my mind it gets to you that's got to be good from the French man
thX
My last comment should have read small venue but nice Legendary sorry
Andy's guitar mixed to low on his lead parts
pieknie!!!!!!!!!!
mooie