RE: Blodwyn Pig
Jon: I dunno about that quite recent - Dudley's hit was in '63 - but I'm sure lots of American bands were performing it. Ah, in my head I had '66 as a date for Dudley's hit, oh well. And yes, of course I was talking about "crossover" performances for rock audiences... --junior
Re: Blodwyn Pig
Ph. Barnard wrote: Ooooh!!! I don't have it with me, but i think it's a UK import that I found used for cheap. Sound quality is fair, but I thought it was an interesting pick up for the price. A Head Rings Out was definitely one of my faves of the 70's and not just cos of the pig's head on the cover. g Oh man, I *loved* Blodwyn Pig!! Alas, last I heard, the great Mick Abrahams was driving a bread truck g. Such is glory A Head Rings out was a very cool album indeed. I'd love to hear it again. You can see Mick Abrahams, of course, in the Stones' Rock n' Roll Circus video, back when he was the first guitarist for the dreaded Jethro Tull (yuck!). He was only on their very first album, but that still leaves a bad taste in my mouth thinking about it!! Phew, what a blast from the past! --junior Yes yes yes. I've been looking for a head rings out for years, since my original disappeared (I blame a certain Carbondale junkie). I loved Abrahams mixed with that guy who played two saxaphones at once. The first Tull album is actually pretty good, mainly because of Abrahams doing a kind of blues meets Wes Montgomery thing as I recall. Havent heard it in years. I recall finding an aritcle about Abrahams somewhere on the web. He apparantly has some newer stuff out on some little indy lable in England or something. Cant remember exactly, but I was probably searching for Blodwyn Pig records. Stuart
Re: Blodwyn Pig
Junior writes: You can see Mick Abrahams, of course, in the Stones' Rock n' Roll Circus video, back when he was the first guitarist for the dreaded Jethro Tull (yuck!). He was only on their very first album, but that still leaves a bad taste in my mouth thinking about it!! Um...that's actually Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi on guitar with Tull in the Circus; his only performance with the group during his infamous 2-week stint with the group. --Jon Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] Wollaston, Massachusetts
Re: Blodwyn Pig
Omigod Jon tells me: Um...that's actually Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi on guitar with Tull in the Circus; his only performance with the group during his infamous 2-week stint with the group. Good lord...g. I always assumed that had to be Mick A.!! I'm gonna rent and watch it tomorrow to see. All I can say is, it serves Tull right, seeing as Mick was great and they were obnoxious, etc I'm renting it asap to check this out. Thanks Jon!, --junior
Re: Blodwyn Pig
And now Stuart!: Yes yes yes. I've been looking for a head rings out for years, since my original disappeared (I blame a certain Carbondale junkie). I loved Abrahams mixed with that guy who played two saxaphones at once. The first Tull album is actual I think we're close to critical mass on this one, people g. A Blodwyn Pig thread does my little heart good. They wrongly *precisely* that sort of band that nailed it and disappeared wrongly. So that decades later the very name makes you grin and wonder, "What the hell *did* happen to my copy of that one??" Lost in the ozone, they are... Wow, what a band. Now I'm gonna be on the lookout for a copy. --junior
Re: Blodwyn Pig
You mean how can you tell stylistically, or how can you tell by their respective haircuts?? g Oboy, I'm gonna rent a video and worry about whether the guitarist is Tony Iommi or Mick Abrahams g, --junior NP: buck sings harlan howard (Mick A. didn't play on this disc...)
Re: Blodwyn Pig
Just another reason to love P2, other folks who remember the joys of Blodwyn Pig. g I kinda think A Head Rings Out came out on CD on some small, re-issue oriented label in the early part of this decade. Never picked it up though. I have the the disc in my hot little hands right now though and here's the info on it: The Modern Alchemist was released in 1997 on the Indigo label in the UK, marketed by Trojan Sales, which sounds like a mailorder house. There is very little other info on the CD book other than a brief history of the band and some quotes from Abrahams. I picked it up for 6 bucks at Cheapos late last year. Jim, smilin' NP: BP-The Modern Alchemist- Dear Jill (ah the memories) G
Re: Blodwyn Pig
BARNARD wrote: You mean how can you tell stylistically, or how can you tell by their respective haircuts?? g I mean Tony Iommi plays left handed. He also had a couple of fingers destroyed in an accident, but I doubt you're gonna see that on the video. Geff King NP: Whose Line Is It Anyway / wife laughing
Re: Blodwyn Pig
Twang content: second sentence of the Beat Instrumental quote.. The link at the bottom is: http://www.unet.univie.ac.at/~a8904593/blodwyn.pig.html the page is outdated, but is shows him and the pig still playing around England as late as last December. Mick Abrahams: Blodwyn Pig bossman! Quote from "Beat Instrumental", February 1971: "Unlike most guitarists, Mick Abrahams' playing, blending sophisticated chord work with dazzling single-string breaks, goes beyond the distinction between lead and rhythm playing. You can hear echoes of many forms - Mick has a wide-ranging style drawing from jazz, country and western, rock'n'roll (ancient and modern) and he is also one of the most imaginative and sensitive exponents of bottlenecking. Mick made his decision to go professional at the fitting age of 21, when his mother asked him whether he wanted a big party or a guitar to launch him into manhood; he chose the guitar, a Gibson SG that he still uses six years later, and shortly after formed his own band, the Original Hustlers, who played mostly Chuck Berry and Little Richard songs and what Mick laughingly refers to as "our own arrangements of Beatles' numbers". His step into a national group came when he joined Neil Christian's Crusaders, who had just lost Jimmy Page, but he left after a three-month stint. "We had to dress up in orange shirts, tight black trousers and white boots and wiggle our asses. If you saw how fat I was then you'd know why I didn't fancy it", he admits. But after an ill-fated venture with a band called the Goodtimers with, amongst others, Graham Waller, Dave Cakebread and Bernie Etherington - "We rehearsed every night for five months and folded after six gigs. It wasn't a bad band, either. We had a big fat, bluesy sound" - Mick found himself back with the Crusaders, and, having played "a few gigs" with the magnificient Screaming Lord Sutch's Savages, went on to join a Luton group called Jensen's Moods, where he played with Clive Bunker and Andy Pyle. His next band was McGregor's Engine with Clive (on drums), Pete Benson (or Fensome? on vocals) and Andy (on bass. Ex-Victor Brox's Blues Train) again." Referring to McGregor's Engine, Pete Frame says in his "Rock Family Trees, Vol. 2". "Jan '67 to Nov. '67. A Luton Supergroup; all had played around the area since Beatles days. This was a power blues band, Cream inspired. Hot locally." Back to "Beat Instrumental": Rehearsing in an adjoining room at Caesar's Palace one day, however, was a band called the John Evans Smash who had been told by their managers to get "a blues guitarist". Mick joined, and managed to persuade Clive to go with him rather than work for Commer Motors; the new group included Ian Anderson and Glenn Cornick and was called Ian Anderson'sBag of Blues. Agent Dave Robson suggested Jethro Tull for a name, and their first record, one of Mick's songs, came out on MGM; "Sunshine Day", by Jethro Tull. Some time later, after Jethro's triumphant appearance at the Kempton festival of 1968, he was at last in a successful band." Mick left Jethro Tull after one album ("This Was") and formed Blodwyn Pig. Made two albums with them - and then established Mick Abrahams Band (initially called Mick Abraham's Pig or Wommet). And swore to never play "Cat's Squirrel" again. Mick Abrahams Band issued two albums: "Mick Abrahams" CHRYSALIS ILPS 9147 (1971) and "At Last" CHRYSALIS CHR 1005 (1972). Jack Lancaster returns on sax on number two. In 1975 he recorded "Learning Guitar With" on SRT SRTM 73313. He should know... Cover above from "Mick's Back" album - still another one. Mick keeps on recording infrequent comeback albums. Check out eminent link below. You can't keep a good man down, can you? Links: The Blodwyn Pig Fan Page BARNARD wrote: You mean how can you tell stylistically, or how can you tell by their respective haircuts?? g Oboy, I'm gonna rent a video and worry about whether the guitarist is Tony Iommi or Mick Abrahams g, --junior NP: buck sings harlan howard (Mick A. didn't play on this disc...)
Re: Blodwyn Pig
Ah, left-handed!!! Well done Geff! I was worrying, cause as I recall Abrahams played an SG too... g --junior, who cannot *wait* to hear the original Blodwyn Pig playing "Six Days on the Road" Talk about ALT-country g
Re: Blodwyn Pig plays Truck-drivin' music
Junior writes: Dig this: in the track listings for the live album, we have a smattering of BP standbys, plus some *Truck-Drivin'* songs!!! Track 1 is "Dunstable Truck-Drivin' Man" (I'm laughing as I type this) and Track 9 is, I kid you not, "Six Days on the Road." Wow, this is not the disc I have. There's nothing it remotely like that even. What I have is pretty much from AHRO, It's Only Love, Dear Jill, See My Way and Ain't Ya Coming Home, Babe? along with a killer version of Cat's Squirrel. Now what the hell is that URL that you were looking at? Jim, smilin'
Re: Blodwyn Pig
.who cannot *wait* to hear the original Blodwyn Pig playing "Six Days on the Road" Talk about ALT-country g I dunno. It *could* sound like Foghat, not that should bother Jerry. g JC
Re: Blodwyn Pig
Jim says: I dunno. It *could* sound like Foghat, not that should bother Jerry. g That's a possibility. But just to think that they were a Brit band performing this number in the 69-71 moment when it was still quite recent, etc., is impressive. I mean, this is when the Burritos were the only *American* band performing it, right? Way to go, Mick! --junior
Re: Blodwyn Pig
Man, to hear some Blodwyn Pig playing country tunes while in my car taking a "Slow Ride". Man, life couldn't get much better... Jer NP: Stonewall Jackson - All The Best On Wed, 3 Feb 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: .who cannot *wait* to hear the original Blodwyn Pig playing "Six Days on the Road" Talk about ALT-country g I dunno. It *could* sound like Foghat, not that should bother Jerry. g JC
Re: Blodwyn Pig
http://www.unet.univie.ac.at/~a8904593/albums.html The liner notes for A Head Rings Out, written my Mick. Check it out. .A sample: "SING ME A SONG THAT I KNOW" - Has the quality of hard rock and blues with heavy accentuation on drums and bass from "vulture" Ron Berg and "budgerigar" Andy Pyle. Vocal from yours truly who thought he was Elvis Presley at the time. (A song to squash budgies by). Jerry Curry wrote: Man, to hear some Blodwyn Pig playing country tunes while in my car taking a "Slow Ride". Man, life couldn't get much better... Jer NP: Stonewall Jackson - All The Best On Wed, 3 Feb 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: .who cannot *wait* to hear the original Blodwyn Pig playing "Six Days on the Road" Talk about ALT-country g I dunno. It *could* sound like Foghat, not that should bother Jerry. g JC As soon as you find this 6 days one, let us know. A must have. As soon as I get that CD release of a Head.
Re: Blodwyn Pig plays Truck-drivin' music
Yow, Stuart!!! At least "Six Days" is only 5 and a half minutes!! g All those 7 and 10-minute tracks are kinda scary... --junior
Re: Blodwyn Pig
I wrote: Um...that's actually Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi on guitar with Tull in the Circus; his only performance with the group during his infamous 2-week stint with the group. Junior responded: Good lord...g. I always assumed that had to be Mick A.!! I'm gonna rent and watch it tomorrow to see. All I can say is, it serves Tull right, seeing as Mick was great and they were obnoxious, etc I'm renting it asap to check this out. Thanks Jon!, A word of warning. I can't remember what the credits say on the video, but on the CD Mick A. is listed as the group's guitarist, in spite of the fact that the guitarist in the pictures is clearly Iommi (pre-moustache, but playing a leftie white SG). In fact, when the CD was first released I e-mailed "I.C.E." about the error (since they love to follow these things and embarass the guilty parties in print...) and they wrote back saying they had been told the same thing by a couple of other people and would follow up on it. As for the plastic fingertips on Iommi's right hand, you can see them in some Sabbath footage, though I didn't really look closely the one time I saw the Tull footage. You're on your own here. Other suggested threads on long-obscure acts: Lindisfarne, Stackridge, Hatfield and the North, Mud, Budgie, and Greenslade. --Jon Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] Wollaston, Massachusetts
Re: Blodwyn Pig
Jon writes: Other suggested threads on long-obscure acts: Lindisfarne, Stackridge, Hatfield and the North, Mud, Budgie, and Greenslade Never really got into any of those for some reason. Though I did like Strawbs, Family and Passport. Jim, feeling really old and my still birthday's two weeks away ObTwang-Heard the Damnations on KGSR today, woo hoo!