Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Sophie Best


I'm impressed too, Slim, but I can top that... I went
to a funeral (of a young guy) where they played "I've
Been to Paradise But I've Never Been To Me". The part
about holding a baby in your arms and making love to
your man that night was particularly, um, poignant.


Sophie

===
Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach him to use the Net and he won't 
bother you for weeks.
_
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Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread BARNARD

A great "Feel Like Makin' Love" moment:

> I went to a white trash wedding once where this was played as the bride 
> walked down the aisle. No kidding.

Gotta admit, Slim, that's pretty impressive.  I hesitate to imagine what
other songs were played during the processional and concluding moments
.  Georgia Satellites would have fit the bill.

--junior






Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Jerry Curry

On Tue, 27 Apr 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

C'mon NealRadioactive, now THAT was one for the ages man.  Plus and
I've mentioned this before their bass player had the coolest hair. 

Np: Tal Bachman
JC



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread JKellySC1

In a message dated 4/27/99 3:17:25 PM Central Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< , it could be
 > > >  said that Bad Company is responsible for the population
 > > >  explosion during the Seventies, because so many kids
 > > >  were conceived to 'Feel Like Making Love.'" >>


I went to a white trash wedding once where this was played as the bride 
walked down the aisle. No kidding.

Slim - who always preferred the song "Bad Company"



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Ndubb

In a message dated 4/27/99 4:38:39 PM EST, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< That's quite alright, because by digging Bad Company.I then moved
 retrospectively and discovered both Free and Mott the Hoople. Loved
 Paul Kossoff and I won't even mention how much I love Ian Hunter. 
 
 And.speaking of Paul Rodger's voice, that's why I liked
 The Firm so much.  Man, can he sing Rock & Roll.
   >>

Jeez Jerry, you had to go ruin it by bringing up the Firm, didn't you? I was 
right there with ya before then, having loved Bad Co, having totally obsessed 
over Ian and Mott, and then this happens. Dang me.

NW
np - Boo-tay



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Jerry Curry


That's quite alright, because by digging Bad Company.I then moved
retrospectively and discovered both Free and Mott the Hoople. Loved
Paul Kossoff and I won't even mention how much I love Ian Hunter. 

And.speaking of Paul Rodger's voice, that's why I liked
The Firm so much.  Man, can he sing Rock & Roll.
 
So, the point being.yes, you can indeed learn a lot from listening to
bands (even ones some would consider to be shitty) and moving
forward/backwards w.r.t origins, etc.

I'd love it if you all would preface a dismissal by saying.."even
though Curry loves this band!" 

I think the 1st 3 Bad Company albums: Bad Company, Straight Shooter, Run
With the Pack and are strong.  Burnin' Sky, Desolation Angels and
Rough Diamonds had their moments, althougher fewer and farther between
with each successive album.  Yep, I have all of them in duplicate:
one playing copy and one copy in absolutely mint vinyl. Ralphs earns my
enmity by resurrecting the band w/out Rodgers but I'm glad they've
evidently patched things up.  A band that defined the 70's for me.

Favorite Bad Company song - _Shooting Star_ followed closely by
_Bad Company_, _Call On Me_ and  _Silver, Blue & Gold_.  I like those
melodic ones, that's for sure. 

Adios,

JC

NP: The Hangdogs - East of Yesterday
next Up - Jim Cuddy - All in Time



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread BARNARD

Neal:

> To think I'd be discussing Bad Co. today. Yow.

No shit, I was just thinking the same.  Wadda list!!!

--juniro



RE: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread BARNARD

Matt:

> I've been told or have read that they were one of the absolute worst
> live bands of their era. Makes sense to me. Remember that horrible album
> with Rock n Roll Fantasy? Yugh.

Actually, I did see them on that very first tour and they were fine, for
that genre.  But--if I may belabor the Free and Mott comparison once
more--I saw both those bands too and the Bad Co show was very
"packaged" and "prefabricated"-feeling by comparison.  My feeling
about Bad Co was that they were a good Arena Act(if that's not an
oxymoron ), whereas the two earlier bands were far more ambitious and
wide-ranging in what they would come up with for a live show.  

I saw Mott many times and, truly, for me they were a formative experience.
Mott shows were crazy-ass affairs filled with what, in retrospect,
was a sort of proto-punk energy and audience attitude.  You never knew
what they'd do and they could go anywhere from overintellectualized
ballads to absolutely chaotic, earshattering, MC5-esque versions of Little
Richard or Chuck Berry chestnuts.  They had humor, depth, attitude,
the guts to take a lot of risks, and VOLUME!! .  As someone once
said, they were the missing link between Dylan and the Pistols...
Mott made me feel good and love rock n' roll the same way X made me
feel good and love rock n' roll years later.  Free,
too, had a great live show, imo, that was also far more unpredictable and
ambitious than what I saw Bad Co do.  It wasn't on the level of a Mott
experience, but to my mind easily better than a Bad Co show in any case.

Anyhow, that's my nostalgic two cents ,
--junior



RE: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Brad Bechtel

Matt has been told bad things by bad people.  I saw Bad Company (with Kansas opening) 
in the 70's and they rocked just fine.  The drummer was a bit thuddy, if you know what 
I mean, but the rest of the band was competent.  If you want a bad show, try crack-era 
David Crosby and Graham Nash.  Or heroin-era Grateful Dead.  Or Foghat any time.

-Brad, back from a relaxing weekend playing for the skiers at Alpine Meadows-



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Ndubb

In a message dated 4/27/99 3:47:42 PM EST, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< Although I haven't owned any Free for years, I do own some Mott albums and
 actually listen to them periodically.  Whereas, I can't see myself
 listening to any Bad Co, etc  Those two are just associated with the
 earlier bands in my mind, I guess. >>

Well, the greatness of Mott is without dispute, but what did Free really 
offer to the world except for on great song? Bad Co did have at least one 
great album and several other fine moments, which, admittedly, did become 
fewer and fewer with each album. It was at least enough to fill about 2/3rds 
of a best of collection, if my hazy memory proves correct.

To think I'd be discussing Bad Co. today. Yow.

Neal Weiss



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread BARNARD

Yeah, Neal and Jerry, I figured I would take a little heat for describing
Bad Co as the downfall of Rodgers and Ralphs.  I almost added the clause,
"even though I know Jerry loved this band" ...

That first album, ok.  I'll admit, the first one was incredibly listenable
and loads of people loved it, etc.  I dug it.  And it made some deserving
guys wealthy.  But after that, did any of them ever get any better?  To
me, at least (who admittedly has a soft spot for Mott and Free), it just
seems like neither one of them did work after that that was as interesting
or influential as the work they did in their earlier bands.

Although I haven't owned any Free for years, I do own some Mott albums and
actually listen to them periodically.  Whereas, I can't see myself
listening to any Bad Co, etc  Those two are just associated with the
earlier bands in my mind, I guess.

--jr.





RE: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Matt Benz

I've been told or have read that they were one of the absolute worst
live bands of their era. Makes sense to me. Remember that horrible album
with Rock n Roll Fantasy? Yugh.

Matt "heard his first beatles song" Benz








Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Ndubb

In a message dated 4/27/99 3:05:41 PM EST, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< This is pretty funny.  The guy has a great voice and as a kid I 
 certainly dug Free, but unfortunately Bad Co was the downfall of both 
 Rodgers and, even more unfortunately in my book, 
 Mott the Hoople founder Mick Ralphs >>

The downfall? How so? That band rocked... for a while. That first record 
alone is a 70s hard rock classic. 

NW



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Geff King

On Tue, 27 Apr 1999, Ph. Barnard wrote:

> Paul Rodgers on his own influence:
> 
> > > "The original Bad Company was the soundtrack to a lot of
> > >  people's lives," says Rodgers. "I mean, if you listen to
> > >  some of the music, a lot of the music, actually, it could be
> > >  said that Bad Company is responsible for the population
> > >  explosion during the Seventies, because so many kids
> > >  were conceived to 'Feel Like Making Love.'"

And here I thought Barry White was the artist responsible



--
 Geff King * email [EMAIL PROTECTED] * http://www2.ari.net/gking/
 "It is a tool of ignorance." -- Joe Gracey, re: bass guitar  



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Jerry Curry


Here he goes againbut, Bad Company was perhaps, my favorite
band a high schooler.  I still retain an awfully fond soft
spot for that band.  Only the Paul Rodgers period though.  I'll 
gladly pony up cash and see the reformed band. 

But what an incredibly stupid quote.groan.

JC

> This is pretty funny.  The guy has a great voice and as a kid I 
> certainly dug Free, but unfortunately Bad Co was the downfall of both 
> Rodgers and, even more unfortunately in my book, 
> Mott the Hoople founder Mick Ralphs
> 
> He certainly seems to have a bizarre sense of his own 
> importance in US demographic speculations!   *What* population 
> surge, morever???  Ah well they'll say anything in an interview.



Re: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Ph. Barnard

Paul Rodgers on his own influence:

> > "The original Bad Company was the soundtrack to a lot of
> >  people's lives," says Rodgers. "I mean, if you listen to
> >  some of the music, a lot of the music, actually, it could be
> >  said that Bad Company is responsible for the population
> >  explosion during the Seventies, because so many kids
> >  were conceived to 'Feel Like Making Love.'"

This is pretty funny.  The guy has a great voice and as a kid I 
certainly dug Free, but unfortunately Bad Co was the downfall of both 
Rodgers and, even more unfortunately in my book, 
Mott the Hoople founder Mick Ralphs

He certainly seems to have a bizarre sense of his own 
importance in US demographic speculations!   *What* population 
surge, morever???  Ah well they'll say anything in an interview.

--junior



RE: Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread Hill, Christopher J

> so many kids
> were conceived to 'Feel Like Making Love.'"
> 
Suddenly, the Jerry Springer guests make SO much more 
sense to me...

Chris





Bad Company quote, URL

1999-04-27 Thread William F. Silvers

Saw this quote in a Rolling Stone bit on the band's new reunion tour.
My quote of the week.
 

"The original Bad Company was the soundtrack to a lot of
 people's lives," says Rodgers. "I mean, if you listen to
 some of the music, a lot of the music, actually, it could be
 said that Bad Company is responsible for the population
 explosion during the Seventies, because so many kids
 were conceived to 'Feel Like Making Love.'"



Complete story at:

http://www.rollingstone.com/sections/news/text/newsarticle.asp?afl=mnew&NewsID=7530&ArtistID=466origin=news

 
b.s.