@BarbarraBay which songs aren't great on Never Say Die? Technical Ecstasy has the pub Rocky Rock n Roll Doctor, but that's about the only weak Ozzy Sabbath track I can think of. Not bad over 8 albums
@@Sabotage8675 what's wrong with the vocals? Great lyrics, one of my favourites! Voice does sound different, could be mistaken for Bill at times! Edit... it is Bill? Awesome if so! But one of my favourites. Catch myself singing it loads
It sounds a bit weird for different reasons, but definitely not bad, the songs are pretty good, especially compared to what the modern Deep Purple has been creating.
Most of The Soft Parade I enjoy. Sure it has strings and is "so different" from The Doors - Waiting for the Sun, but it's not at all a case where they mashed strings and a rock band together. It was intentionally arranged, and I liked it. Although I do struggle not to skip "Tell All the People" truthfully.
@jamesrowden303 Maybe that's true.There are those nutcases that prevent the band from even properly starting and the those like Morrison who drive it forward through chaos. I happen to like some of the jams on those trio albums like Ship's and Sails, Eye Of The Sun and few others but yeah they made them too quickly after Jim was gone i think and sound like a mourning country band when it comes to singing.
@@sinenkaari5477 three things here post LA Woman - having to write songs to accommodate two weak singing voices; lyrics - despite Jimbo's pretensions, there was certainly a style there - Krieger's lyrics even when Jim was alive were always a bit pedestrian; also, it is unclear how much impact Morrison had on the music itself even though he didn't really play an instrument - songs sometimes written around vocal phrasings for example.
good on you, for your #1. 👏👏Never Say Die is brilliant. As pointed out, it does have all kinds of different elements, but you left one out - blue eyed soul, on the end of Swinging the Chain. Listen to the bass on Over To You - how this release could be slagged by the band or anyone else, is beyond me. What a refreshing change from some of the previous releases, in my opinion (which were epic, of course)
Over To You is a real Sabbath gem. Don Airey's piano runs in the pre-chorus and Ozzy's yearning vocal breaks my heart! But I obviously need to check put the bass more.....thanks for that.
WOW! That Pharaoh Saunders clip with one of the Last Poets chanting - brilliant! I hadn't seen that one before. I like the creative use of this and the other clips too, to create a surreal show. P.S. you need to do a show on the drummer Bernard Purdie (who played on the Last Poets Delights Of The Garden and is one of the best funk session drummers of all time). Or you could do a show on the top 10 sidemen and include Idris Muhammed as well.
Speaking of Bernard Purdie if you don't know it watch the Aretha Franklin documentary 'Amazing Grace' a live performance from 1972 with choir and a band including Bernard Purdie, Cornell Dupree, and Chuck Rainey. Directed by Stanley Pollack and featuring a cameo by audience members Mick Jagger and Charlie Watts. Also, Bernard in Gato Barbieri's band circa 1971 live at Montreux. He was one of those musicians who made everything better. ua-cam.com/video/6jXrgOcwf6A/v-deo.htmlsi=tLA3V-lOd9kwKd5M
Brilliant. Your impression of War Pigs nearly brought tears to my eyes. I wish my best mate was alive to have seen it. I completely agree with you about Never Say Die!
Presence is a sonic wonder - from the breathtaking, helter-skelter ride of the Leviathan that is Achilles Last Stand, to the the atmospherically chilling Siamese twin of Since I've Been Loving You - no apologies for this album are necessary.
I do enjoy you Andy. This is a part of your Art. Sometimes I listen to you too much and I have to step away, but when I come back you make me smile and laugh.
Ray Wilson later guested on Hackett's Genesis Revisited II, which was a lovely thing for Steve to do. He also worked with Anthony Philips as an acknowledgement of his contribution to the band's sound. Wilson is more of a prog artist now.
Thank you for another one 👌🎶 Perhaps a thing to consider: Recording (or mixing down) your voice in mono might make for a more pleasant listening experience for many. Especially when listening without seeing you move in front of the camera, one can get a slight sense of disorientation. Probably not a problem for most viewers/listeners, but I don't think valuable information will be lost.
Every video of yours is an education...I am a couple of years older than you, yet I am ever grateful to you for all that you have done in educating us small time musicians.
I hope that album makes the list (and you didnt just like it as a thumbnail). There is some spectacular stuff on it. Perfect Day is near perfect, no wonder Lou Reed was so impressed. And Thank You is the bees knees.
So great to hear you mention Duran Duran and this underrated album! I find that Thank You has quite a few little gems sprinkled throughout. I particularly enjoy the title track, Perfect Day, and Watching the Detectives, and Lay Lady Lay.
For your life on presence by Led Zeppelin is one of the greatest hard rock tracks of all time. It was so good. They performed it at their 2007 reunion and it even surpassed the album version.
Thank you for this video! Hot Space is my favourite Queen album - in my mind, the only decent song they recorded after Hot Space was Radio Ga Ga. And I'm so glad you included the Duran Duran album Thank You. I always loved their versions of Perfect Day and White Lines and regard the Durans' version of Watching The Detectives as the definitive version of that song.
I think that "Permanent Waves" is held in high regard. It has two major singles on it, is the point where they changed direction, and still highlights their progressive roots. "Moving Pictures" tends to overshadow it, but it is really the second part of a two LP effort that saw them distill their long pieces into shorter, more concise pieces, without sacrificing their art. "Caress of Steel" is an issue because the band itself does not hold it in high regard. There were external interests at work which forced them to move from "Fly by Night" to "Caress of Steel" too rapidly. It almost destroyed their prospects, but instead it saved them. "2112" happened as something of a "going to go out in a blaze of glory". Only it did well. A half rock opera on one side, followed by some good singles on the second side. It both secured their standing with fans, and added new ones. It wouldn't have happened if "Caress of Steel" hadn't backed them into a corner. It also meant that they were able to dictate terms to their record company. From then on out, Rush dealt with their record companies much as George Lucas dealt with Fox. The company was basically a distributor. Aside from that, they were an independent operation.
@@gdkopinionator4356 Permanent Waves is top 3 Rush for me. Was only saying it was the first record of theirs I got my hands on. Otherwise I am with you on all your points!
Driving the last spike is a lovely tune on the We can't dance album, quite a heart warming tribute to the guys who laid the train tracks, just sayin 😅 Love the video, new sub here, been bingeing your vids the past few days ❤
I watched Magical Mystery Tour because of your opinion (Blue Jay Way episode) and you are right , it is great. So many absurdist echoes came from these Beatles skits.
Your drumming vocal immitation is a crack up ! I listened to the Duran Duran LP - totally agree - really like most of the covers ! DD was a great band in the 80's - massively important in New Wave Dance cross over in USA - There were many BR 12" remixes of all their top tunes - Next to listen is your Prince recommendation - cheers mate !
I've had a right f***ing week of it with one thing and another. I wont go into detail, I'll simply say that I don't just need your Sabbath Trance, I also deserve it. The highlight just now knocked your REO Speedwagon into a cocked hat and to be fair, that was pretty bloody good. So, a quick rendition of the entire of War Pigs and I'll Paypal you twenty quid. Deal?
In '76 i was 13 and really anticipated Presence's release having been a huge Zep fan by then. Yeah, it was different, but i grew to really appreciate it and could never understand all the critisism. Same with Never Say Die. I put it right up there with the other 70's Sabbath albums. It's just different, but so were every one of their previous albums. Maybe because i was still young and open to new things i gave it a go. To this day I'm still very open to all sorts of musical genres. Makes me a pretty happy musically minded guy. By the way, love your Duran Duran thoughts Andy! Appreciate your take on things, even if occasionally i disagree. Great job mate!
It's not name dropping. It is remembering past and ever so current loves. Your joyful geeking out makes this video more alive and real, in fact it is my favorite of yours so far. On another note, are there actually people who dislike Presence? "Achilles" alone made me like the rest.
Great Plant story, and absolutely brilliant Sabbath proto-trance! Syd Barrett - Rhamadan. Ever heard of it? It's on YT. A jam from c1968, where no-one seems to know who played. I came across it while veering off to listen to Coda, mid AndyE video, and up it popped as a recommendation. So it's your fault :)
I agree on Never Say Die. That and Tech Ex were later after I had thoroughly digested the other albums. I think they were transitioning into a rock band instead of the “heavy metal” band they were known for. The two final record deserve an objective listen for sure.
Obviously, I'm familiar with these bands but I've never heard any of these records. You've piqued my curiosity, I think I'll check a few out, thanks Andy.
Nice to hear your list, Presence is top 3 LZ for me and love CO/DA. Always had a soft spot for Hot Space and Come Taste the Band is really good as well. Shockwave on NSD rocks. Never could understand the hate that record gets. Great video and really like the surreal touches.
Superb. I was the same age as you when the Elder came out. For a fantasy/sci-fi/horror loving kid it was a great album (and produced by Bob ezrin). We're Gonna Groove is one my fave Zep tracks and yes, every Black Sabbath album up until Never Say Die is brilliant. For me, they're the best of the 'unholy trinity' of rock.
Andy, this was bonkers, a little artsy fartsy as well or surreal as you say. I really wanted you to finish miming War Pigs. I'm going to rewatch that high. I mean were you behaving that way in front of Plant? That's just insane. The first two tracks of CODA blew me away first time I heard it. I love Presence. Tea for One is so beautiful. The whole Van Morrison transformation creeped me out.
I don't hear the decline in Robert's vocals either. Sure he got older and doesn't sound like a wailing banshee anymore, but really that didn't last all that long anyway.
Your videos are always kind of an art form of itself. I don't always agree with you (who does!? :D) but your explanations really make sense listening to you and your stories. You are kind of a music guru! I like the edge and the provocations and as I said, your videos are something else. I am kind of a musician myself and deep into prog, and just have to say: Keep it up!
@@AndyEdwardsDrummer That's what I mean and that's the reason I like them! I said "Art". Well, I was grown up with "Prog" since I started to listen to music outside of "classical" (by my parents) and Europop (esp. by my mother) with 15. But it was not called prog. Bands like Pink Floyd, Genesis, Supertramp, Marillion, or artists like Kate Bush, Chris de Burgh (before Into the Light), Peter Gabriel were all labled "Art Rock" in the papers, magazines, everday life and sometimes by themselves... If the sound was a bit harder like with Queen, Rush, Uriah Heep etc. they were just put into the drawer labled Hard Rock. The differentiation between Prog and Art came only really in the later 80s/early 90s and the genres were getting more specific. At least this was the case here in Switzerland, Germany, France, Italy... I don't know about the UK or US. I was the first time in the UK in 86 and heard the term "Art Rock" quite often but never "Prog". I think it's easier nowadays when you have a finer labeling but a lot of these bands (like Marillion or Motorhead) never wanted to be put into a specific genre anyway and I totally can understand it. For me Prog is not a genre per se but kind of an approach to the music they make. Syd Barrett was proggy, so was David Bowie, The Beatles, King Crimson etc. They played many "genres" but gave them a more progressive note, wanted to go somewhere "where no man has gone before". I Am the Walrus, God only Knows, White Rabbit, Interstellar Overdrive may be Art Rock, Barroque Pop, Acid, Space Rock - but they all have something in common: a composing and playing out of the box approach. On the other hand I think that Art Rock/Pop/Metal is something else: this is a genre per se. It doesn't have to be progressive, but popular music on "a higher level". You take Johann Strauss which is "pop" within the "classical" genre (I don't like the term classic anyway, as you can't compare Barroque with Programmatic or Impressionist music) and Smetana which is "art". One is pure entertainment of the masses (or the one who payed for the composition) and the other one is an expression of the artist him/herself. So my differenciation would be prog is an approach in any kind of music that is "out of the box", and art is you take something already existing and make more out of it. Sgt. Pepper for me is Art, Piper at the Gates of Dawn is Prog - both were recorded the same time and both bands were influenced by each other - but the outcome is different. I don't know if you see the things the same way or if my thinking is totally wrong :D And yes, your videos are Prog Art if I may conclude it like that!
Presence... I also love it and I think one of the reasons it sounds 'different' is because of the studio, Polar studios, which was ultra modern and state of the art.
40 years ago I worked with someone who was a huge Doors fan...apart from Soft Parade which he absolutely hated. it irritated him no end that it's genuinely my favourite album by the band.
I LOVE Presence by Zep. Used to see it in the bargain bin all the time before I got into them in the early 80's, thought it must be a lousy album, but turns out it IS a masterpiece of hard rock with no keyboards or frills. "Achilles' Last Stand" is like a gut-punch by the hammer of the GODS! (I think In Through the Out Door is pretty brilliant as well.)
Love the ever changing Van Morrison picture. He is the dark overlord.
Your Black Sabbath air drumming trance moment had me laughing out loud. Just too relatable
I'm pretty sure Andy is drunk in this video.
Junior’s Eyes is an absolutely incredible song
I came here just to say that.
Agree with Never Say Die. Some very cool tracks.
yep "some" 😒
@BarbarraBay which songs aren't great on Never Say Die?
Technical Ecstasy has the pub Rocky Rock n Roll Doctor, but that's about the only weak Ozzy Sabbath track I can think of.
Not bad over 8 albums
@@prestigepea1235
Swinging the chain. Awesome riffs by Tony but the vocals 😖
@@Sabotage8675 what's wrong with the vocals? Great lyrics, one of my favourites! Voice does sound different, could be mistaken for Bill at times! Edit... it is Bill? Awesome if so!
But one of my favourites. Catch myself singing it loads
@@prestigepea1235 I'll let em have Never Say Die. It's pretty good. Technical Ecstasy though get's shit for good reason
Great, surprising choices as always! Presence is soooo undervalued.
I see Van's baleful visage hanging in the background, gazing on at the proceedings in bemused disapproval.
I love your channel Andy.
Keep working it man!
Thanks! Will do!
Thank you for recognizing Come Taste The Band as a great lp.
It sounds a bit weird for different reasons, but definitely not bad, the songs are pretty good, especially compared to what the modern Deep Purple has been creating.
People are always complaining about The Soft Parade couse "they have changed their sound" couse it has strings. I have always loved it
Most of The Soft Parade I enjoy. Sure it has strings and is "so different" from The Doors - Waiting for the Sun, but it's not at all a case where they mashed strings and a rock band together. It was intentionally arranged, and I liked it. Although I do struggle not to skip "Tell All the People" truthfully.
@@jordaneffinger2104 Yep. I love Tell All The People. Check out the 69 TV live version where Ray plays it on Vox Continental you might like that one
@jamesrowden303 Maybe that's true.There are those nutcases that prevent the band from even properly starting and the those like Morrison who drive it forward through chaos. I happen to like some of the jams on those trio albums like Ship's and Sails, Eye Of The Sun and few others but yeah they made them too quickly after Jim was gone i think and sound like a mourning country band when it comes to singing.
@@sinenkaari5477 three things here post LA Woman - having to write songs to accommodate two weak singing voices; lyrics - despite Jimbo's pretensions, there was certainly a style there - Krieger's lyrics even when Jim was alive were always a bit pedestrian; also, it is unclear how much impact Morrison had on the music itself even though he didn't really play an instrument - songs sometimes written around vocal phrasings for example.
@jamesrowden303 Pink Floyd?
Good to see some love for Never Say Die❤️Shock Wave is a favorite song of mine. Really creative stuff!
good on you, for your #1. 👏👏Never Say Die is brilliant. As pointed out, it does have all kinds of different elements, but you left one out - blue eyed soul, on the end of Swinging the Chain. Listen to the bass on Over To You - how this release could be slagged by the band or anyone else, is beyond me. What a refreshing change from some of the previous releases, in my opinion (which were epic, of course)
Over To You is a real Sabbath gem. Don Airey's piano runs in the pre-chorus and Ozzy's yearning vocal breaks my heart! But I obviously need to check put the bass more.....thanks for that.
I’m with you on the Zeppelin/Purple/Sabbath/Kiss choices…..All great albums that take some listens to really appreciate. 👍
Throughly enjoyed the two 'Black Sabbath trances' Andy. Story was cool too
Same here. Great story!
WOW! That Pharaoh Saunders clip with one of the Last Poets chanting - brilliant! I hadn't seen that one before. I like the creative use of this and the other clips too, to create a surreal show. P.S. you need to do a show on the drummer Bernard Purdie (who played on the Last Poets Delights Of The Garden and is one of the best funk session drummers of all time). Or you could do a show on the top 10 sidemen and include Idris Muhammed as well.
Speaking of Bernard Purdie if you don't know it watch the Aretha Franklin documentary 'Amazing Grace' a live performance from 1972 with choir and a band including Bernard Purdie, Cornell Dupree, and Chuck Rainey. Directed by Stanley Pollack and featuring a cameo by audience members Mick Jagger and Charlie Watts. Also, Bernard in Gato Barbieri's band circa 1971 live at Montreux. He was one of those musicians who made everything better.
ua-cam.com/video/6jXrgOcwf6A/v-deo.htmlsi=tLA3V-lOd9kwKd5M
Brilliant. Your impression of War Pigs nearly brought tears to my eyes. I wish my best mate was alive to have seen it. I completely agree with you about Never Say Die!
Who thought Presence was bad? One of my favorite Zep albums. And Page discovers the whammy bar. What could be better?
Had to watch the Duran Duran White Lines video after yours. Absolutely brilliant! Thanks
So thankful for you giving "Calling All Stations" some love. I'll find myself coming back to it very often for a reason.
Achilles Last Stand is one of the most intense and epic rock songs of all time.
One of my all time favourite tracks, needs playing loud
Yes, yes it is. My favorite Zep tune.
Agree. It's ALMOST punk in that it's so aggressive.
I remember that song back at knebworth in '79 that an the trees on fire...
@@spacerockwizard I’d like to see a punk band try play it lol!
Tommy Bolin's playing on Spectrum was iconic. His solo on Quadrant 4 alone rates as one of the greatest ever recorded. Brilliant guitarist.
Totally concur!
So glad you mentioned Geezer rhyming masses with masses during War Pigs. That has bugged me for years, I'm glad someone else noticed lol
Presence; you're not alone.
along with coda DIG IT
Presence is VERY present.
Herb Alpert and the Tijana Brass and the Shadows are my hidden pleasures!
Here here Andy, Presence is perfection, Royal Orleans my favorite Zep track!!!! CODA too! Absolutely the tenth Zep album!
Andy, I love your channel. Brings joy to my life. Keep up the great work.
I just love your videos Andy, you make this old prog guy happy, thank you !
Class thoroughly enjoyed that, especially the war pigs cover haha
Presence is a sonic wonder - from the breathtaking, helter-skelter ride of the Leviathan that is Achilles Last Stand, to the the atmospherically chilling Siamese twin of Since I've Been Loving You - no apologies for this album are necessary.
TFO
SIBLY isnt on Presence
@geoffmcmahon4453 I said the twin of SIBLY! If you don't know the identity of this track - you don't know Zeppelin!
@@Rhialto-the-Marvellous ah sorry yeah Tea For One i misread what you wrote
I do enjoy you Andy. This is a part of your Art. Sometimes I listen to you too much and I have to step away, but when I come back you make me smile and laugh.
Wow, thank you
Ray Wilson later guested on Hackett's Genesis Revisited II, which was a lovely thing for Steve to do. He also worked with Anthony Philips as an acknowledgement of his contribution to the band's sound. Wilson is more of a prog artist now.
Nourishment for the heart, soul and mind. Thanks Andy, for another tip top video. Love n light dude.
Thank you for another one 👌🎶
Perhaps a thing to consider: Recording (or mixing down) your voice in mono might make for a more pleasant listening experience for many.
Especially when listening without seeing you move in front of the camera, one can get a slight sense of disorientation. Probably not a problem for most viewers/listeners, but I don't think valuable information will be lost.
For 45 yrs plus Never say die has been my #1 Sabbath LP! Love yor channel👍
Every video of yours is an education...I am a couple of years older than you, yet I am ever grateful to you for all that you have done in educating us small time musicians.
I hope that album makes the list (and you didnt just like it as a thumbnail). There is some spectacular stuff on it. Perfect Day is near perfect, no wonder Lou Reed was so impressed. And Thank You is the bees knees.
It is
So great to hear you mention Duran Duran and this underrated album! I find that Thank You has quite a few little gems sprinkled throughout. I particularly enjoy the title track, Perfect Day, and Watching the Detectives, and Lay Lady Lay.
I would never have listened to Chaos and Destruction if I hadn't seen this video. I have to say I really enjoyed parts of it. Thank you.
I agree about the Coda tracks and In Through the Out Door. But I would keep I’m Gonna Crawl too, great song.
For your life on presence by Led Zeppelin is one of the greatest hard rock tracks of all time. It was so good. They performed it at their 2007 reunion and it even surpassed the album version.
Great to see some love for mid nineties Prince, thanks Andy for the very positive video!
I never agree with most peoples musical ideas, but I do with you!
This one was one of your best.
Loved the video, Andy. I also enjoy your stories regarding Robert Plant, et al. I really appreciate your frankness and honesty. Keep up the good work!
When someone has made the people ok with Herb Alpert albums, the world will know peace
I may make that my aim
Truth. I own many. The A in A&M records
Tijuana brass and Brazil 66 were early purchases
love the Brass
Chuck Berghofer's bass playing on 'Lollipops and Roses' is on another level entirely. Monster groove.
Come taste the band...Yesssss. The drumming is an absolute masterclass!
I'm a deep ritchie blackmore fan, but *come taste the band* is one of my all time favs!
I remember people calling that lp Come taste the Come.😂😂😂
@@davidgangemi3314 well but the point about it is whether those people you remember came or didn't?! 😅
Thank you for this video! Hot Space is my favourite Queen album - in my mind, the only decent song they recorded after Hot Space was Radio Ga Ga. And I'm so glad you included the Duran Duran album Thank You. I always loved their versions of Perfect Day and White Lines and regard the Durans' version of Watching The Detectives as the definitive version of that song.
Looking forward to settling in with this new one soon!
Caress of Steel? It was the second Rush album I got in the early 80's, after Permanent Waves, and is much better than its reputation.
Agree! Even if it was only for the intro to the Necromancer
I think that "Permanent Waves" is held in high regard. It has two major singles on it, is the point where they changed direction, and still highlights their progressive roots. "Moving Pictures" tends to overshadow it, but it is really the second part of a two LP effort that saw them distill their long pieces into shorter, more concise pieces, without sacrificing their art.
"Caress of Steel" is an issue because the band itself does not hold it in high regard. There were external interests at work which forced them to move from "Fly by Night" to "Caress of Steel" too rapidly. It almost destroyed their prospects, but instead it saved them. "2112" happened as something of a "going to go out in a blaze of glory". Only it did well. A half rock opera on one side, followed by some good singles on the second side. It both secured their standing with fans, and added new ones. It wouldn't have happened if "Caress of Steel" hadn't backed them into a corner. It also meant that they were able to dictate terms to their record company. From then on out, Rush dealt with their record companies much as George Lucas dealt with Fox. The company was basically a distributor. Aside from that, they were an independent operation.
@@gdkopinionator4356 Permanent Waves is top 3 Rush for me. Was only saying it was the first record of theirs I got my hands on. Otherwise I am with you on all your points!
CoS has two (2) decent songs. The rest is pretentious stoner twaddle.
@@dukeford8893 Lee and Lifeson clearly agree with your assessment. It almost ended their career.
I remember Crankin up' nobodys fault but mine(cassette) commuting to work .Great guitar work etc.!
Andei!!! Thanks for turning me on to the Cardiacs & the Jan Hammer album Live in Dallas 1977. Brilliant stuff.
Enjoy!
Always loved "Never Say Die" . Air Dance & Junior's Eyes are stone cold classics.
Driving the last spike is a lovely tune on the We can't dance album, quite a heart warming tribute to the guys who laid the train tracks, just sayin 😅
Love the video, new sub here, been bingeing your vids the past few days ❤
I watched Magical Mystery Tour because of your opinion (Blue Jay Way episode) and you are right , it is great. So many absurdist echoes came from these Beatles skits.
thank you for this vid. you just got a new fan.
Your drumming vocal immitation is a crack up ! I listened to the Duran Duran LP - totally agree - really like most of the covers ! DD was a great band in the 80's -
massively important in New Wave Dance cross over in USA - There were many BR 12" remixes of all their top tunes - Next to listen is your Prince recommendation - cheers mate !
I've had a right f***ing week of it with one thing and another. I wont go into detail, I'll simply say that I don't just need your Sabbath Trance, I also deserve it. The highlight just now knocked your REO Speedwagon into a cocked hat and to be fair, that was pretty bloody good.
So, a quick rendition of the entire of War Pigs and I'll Paypal you twenty quid. Deal?
In '76 i was 13 and really anticipated Presence's release having been a huge Zep fan by then. Yeah, it was different, but i grew to really appreciate it and could never understand all the critisism. Same with Never Say Die. I put it right up there with the other 70's Sabbath albums. It's just different, but so were every one of their previous albums. Maybe because i was still young and open to new things i gave it a go. To this day I'm still very open to all sorts of musical genres. Makes me a pretty happy musically minded guy. By the way, love your Duran Duran thoughts Andy! Appreciate your take on things, even if occasionally i disagree. Great job mate!
Will check out the Prince record. Dismissed it for the reasons you mentioned plus I never heard it was more rock oriented.
Will advise.
It's not name dropping. It is remembering past and ever so current loves. Your joyful geeking out makes this video more alive and real, in fact it is my favorite of yours so far.
On another note, are there actually people who dislike Presence? "Achilles" alone made me like the rest.
Oh yes!!! Let's go. I saw Duran Duran on the Thankyou tour. It was wild
Somewhat relieved you didnt include Trout Mask Replica. 😄
Captain Beefheart:
"What key should we play this song in?"
Band:
"Yes!"
there is a CD set of the making of this landmark surreal album.......
suffice to say a lotta work/thought went into it !
I half expected John Cleese to come on screen and say, “And now for something completely different.”
Lemon curry?
Keep name dropping, Andy ! And forgetting the titles of songs !
Absolutely fantastic have a wonderful day also happy Thursday Andy ❤😊
'Meet the Monkees' is a classic.
Love Nobody’s Fault But Mine.
I absolutely love both Presence and Never Say Die. For some strange reason, they are summertime albums for me. Can’t explain that.
Great Plant story, and absolutely brilliant Sabbath proto-trance!
Syd Barrett - Rhamadan. Ever heard of it? It's on YT. A jam from c1968, where no-one seems to know who played.
I came across it while veering off to listen to Coda, mid AndyE video, and up it popped as a recommendation. So it's your fault :)
Art does give a direction to your life. Absolutely. So true.
Loved the interlude
I agree on Never Say Die. That and Tech Ex were later after I had thoroughly digested the other albums.
I think they were transitioning into a rock band instead of the “heavy metal” band they were known for.
The two final record deserve an objective listen for sure.
Obviously, I'm familiar with these bands but I've never heard any of these records. You've piqued my curiosity, I think I'll check a few out, thanks Andy.
Props on Hot Space love -- Freddie waving his willy at the [f]rigid rockists -- I've always felt it was more consistent than at least The Game!
I have been telling people that 'Chaos And Disorder' is an amazingly great album since the 1990's. Thank you, I feel very affirmed.
Nice to hear your list, Presence is top 3 LZ for me and love CO/DA. Always had a soft spot for Hot Space and Come Taste the Band is really good as well. Shockwave on NSD rocks. Never could understand the hate that record gets. Great video and really like the surreal touches.
Hot Space has a great track called Dancer which has some of the tastiest riffs I have ever heard is one of my favourite songs to crank on the stereo.
Andy! Awesome video! Was that interlude towards the end of the video The Last Poets?
That stuff about Robert Plant's inferior vocals that is repeatedly trotted out about Presence is a classic case of received wisdom.
Wearing and Tearing is a great track from Coda. The live version Plant and Page did at Knebsworth was fantastic.
Superb. I was the same age as you when the Elder came out. For a fantasy/sci-fi/horror loving kid it was a great album (and produced by Bob ezrin). We're Gonna Groove is one my fave Zep tracks and yes, every Black Sabbath album up until Never Say Die is brilliant. For me, they're the best of the 'unholy trinity' of rock.
Black Sabbath " Technical Ecstasy", Uriah Heep "Conquest",ELP " Live Beach".
I am absolutely with you about 'Thank You' by Duran Duran. I think it's a brilliant album!
Andy, this was bonkers, a little artsy fartsy as well or surreal as you say. I really wanted you to finish miming War Pigs. I'm going to rewatch that high. I mean were you behaving that way in front of Plant? That's just insane. The first two tracks of CODA blew me away first time I heard it. I love Presence. Tea for One is so beautiful. The whole Van Morrison transformation creeped me out.
Watched this - great start to my day ❤
All Hail Andy Edwards for the best "voice only" cover of "War Pigs" ever uttered. Bravo.
YES Presence... it is my favorite LZ album, and I love 'em all.
I don't hear the decline in Robert's vocals either. Sure he got older and doesn't sound like a wailing banshee anymore, but really that didn't last all that long anyway.
Andy, "I'm Gonna Crawl" on ITTOD is up there with Tea For One.
My fave too 👊
@@DrOz-007 Heck yea!
All I need is this thermos, and this drum key...
Ok, I'll check out the Prince album, and I looked up the Hofmeister Bear. Cheers from Canada
Got most of the Albums and yes Duran Duran's Thank You IS a real master piece - no doubt !!!
Never Say Die is a solid album. The way people talk about it makes me wonder if they ever actually listened to it.
The album that gets my vote has gotta be in this! 😊
Those last 7 minutes were awesome. Fascinating, poignant and honest. Not sure there's a stranger I'd rather have a pint with!
Your videos are always kind of an art form of itself. I don't always agree with you (who does!? :D) but your explanations really make sense listening to you and your stories. You are kind of a music guru! I like the edge and the provocations and as I said, your videos are something else. I am kind of a musician myself and deep into prog, and just have to say: Keep it up!
My videos are not only about Prog, they are prog!
@@AndyEdwardsDrummer That's what I mean and that's the reason I like them! I said "Art". Well, I was grown up with "Prog" since I started to listen to music outside of "classical" (by my parents) and Europop (esp. by my mother) with 15. But it was not called prog. Bands like Pink Floyd, Genesis, Supertramp, Marillion, or artists like Kate Bush, Chris de Burgh (before Into the Light), Peter Gabriel were all labled "Art Rock" in the papers, magazines, everday life and sometimes by themselves... If the sound was a bit harder like with Queen, Rush, Uriah Heep etc. they were just put into the drawer labled Hard Rock. The differentiation between Prog and Art came only really in the later 80s/early 90s and the genres were getting more specific. At least this was the case here in Switzerland, Germany, France, Italy... I don't know about the UK or US. I was the first time in the UK in 86 and heard the term "Art Rock" quite often but never "Prog". I think it's easier nowadays when you have a finer labeling but a lot of these bands (like Marillion or Motorhead) never wanted to be put into a specific genre anyway and I totally can understand it.
For me Prog is not a genre per se but kind of an approach to the music they make. Syd Barrett was proggy, so was David Bowie, The Beatles, King Crimson etc. They played many "genres" but gave them a more progressive note, wanted to go somewhere "where no man has gone before". I Am the Walrus, God only Knows, White Rabbit, Interstellar Overdrive may be Art Rock, Barroque Pop, Acid, Space Rock - but they all have something in common: a composing and playing out of the box approach.
On the other hand I think that Art Rock/Pop/Metal is something else: this is a genre per se. It doesn't have to be progressive, but popular music on "a higher level". You take Johann Strauss which is "pop" within the "classical" genre (I don't like the term classic anyway, as you can't compare Barroque with Programmatic or Impressionist music) and Smetana which is "art". One is pure entertainment of the masses (or the one who payed for the composition) and the other one is an expression of the artist him/herself.
So my differenciation would be prog is an approach in any kind of music that is "out of the box", and art is you take something already existing and make more out of it. Sgt. Pepper for me is Art, Piper at the Gates of Dawn is Prog - both were recorded the same time and both bands were influenced by each other - but the outcome is different.
I don't know if you see the things the same way or if my thinking is totally wrong :D
And yes, your videos are Prog Art if I may conclude it like that!
block back wall makes "set" look like a crime boss prison cell ... SO COOL! can't wait to listen to this.. now
I bloody love Come Taste The Band
This has to be the 5th best rendition of War Pigs I have heard! (top 4 were by Sabbath)
Presence...
I also love it and I think one of the reasons it sounds 'different' is because of the studio, Polar studios, which was ultra modern and state of the art.
The Doors' Waiting For the Sun or The Soft Parade?
Great albums, better than the two that followed, for me anyway.
@@daicullinane7746Actually the last two strike me as some of their darkest stuff. You can feel the depression oozing out of Morrison’s soul.
40 years ago I worked with someone who was a huge Doors fan...apart from Soft Parade which he absolutely hated. it irritated him no end that it's genuinely my favourite album by the band.
@@danielschaeffer1294 No denying that. I just find as albums, Waiting and Soft preferable.
your sound FX are hilarious 😂
I LOVE Presence by Zep. Used to see it in the bargain bin all the time before I got into them in the early 80's, thought it must be a lousy album, but turns out it IS a masterpiece of hard rock with no keyboards or frills. "Achilles' Last Stand" is like a gut-punch by the hammer of the GODS! (I think In Through the Out Door is pretty brilliant as well.)