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 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 4:23 PM   
 By:   Justsumcrustydude   (Member)


Peace and lovesmile
B


It's all you need. Bwana.

 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 4:25 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

As long as you dont like prog-rock....

We be cool.

 
 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 4:35 PM   
 By:   OnyaBirri   (Member)

I FEEL FINE is driven by its great lead line (and Ringo' wild drums)
Paul didnt interrupt anything!


The bass line clashes with the drum pattern. It's a mambo drum pattern, but the bass is not playing a tumbao. Just sayin'.

 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 4:43 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

WhatsA "tumbao"?

 
 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 4:53 PM   
 By:   Peter Greenhill   (Member)

Quincy Jones, Count Basie & Frank Sinatra

 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 5:00 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

Fyi
According to his listing in American Heritage Dictionary (2002) his middle name is Delight and he is " primarily known for his musical composition for movies and television".

 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 5:01 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

Quincy Jones, Count Basie & Frank Sinatra



Thats a trio not a tumbao.
Lol!!!!!

 
 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 5:01 PM   
 By:   Peter Greenhill   (Member)

Quincy Jones in Paris, 1960

 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 5:05 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

Quincy Jones in Paris, 1960



"Where the white women at?"*

wink

*Thats from BLAZING SADDLES. Dont crucify me
Co written by Richard Pryor.

 
 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 5:06 PM   
 By:   Peter Greenhill   (Member)

Quincy at the Royal Albert Hall for his Prom. August 2016.

 
 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 5:23 PM   
 By:   OnyaBirri   (Member)

 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 5:25 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

WhatsA "tumbao"?


C'mon!
I really want to know.

 
 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 5:54 PM   
 By:   Justsumcrustydude   (Member)

As long as you dont like prog-rock....

We be cool.


I don't mind a little, OLD OLD King Crimson.

But, overall not much of a fan. I'll take Deep Purple over that.

 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 6:00 PM   
 By:   WILLIAMDMCCRUM   (Member)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumbao

I think it's well known that the wave of post-Beatles artists did hit black virtuoso players hard. They heard these newbies playing a watered-down version of what they themselves had perfected for decades, and getting away with it. Also there's the thing of Blues coming from genuine grievance and pain, now becoming chic amongst people who just wanted to have fun with it. But they learned it could be mutually beneficial and could cut both ways.

I remember hearing a blues singer saying something like, '... and then they (the Beatles wave) had that long hair thing goin' on, and we just couldn't compete with that: that's where the Afro came from. We were never gonna be able to copy the Beatles cut ...' The 'new' style was even associated with a 'new' haircut that the originators couldn't grow!

It must've felt like a hijack. But that doesn't preclude them making money from the boom.

I once helped write and voiceover a pilot for a late night blues radio show conjured up by an ad agency. Auntie Beeb (BBC) didn't bite on that one.

 
 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 6:22 PM   
 By:   Justsumcrustydude   (Member)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumbao

I think it's well known that the wave of post-Beatles artists did hit black virtuoso players hard. They heard these newbies playing a watered-down version of what they themselves had perfected for decades, and getting away with it. Also there's the thing of Blues coming from genuine grievance and pain, now becoming chic amongst people who just wanted to have fun with it. But they learned it could be mutually beneficial and could cut both ways.

I remember hearing a blues singer saying something like, '... and then they (the Beatles wave) had that long hair thing goin' on, and we just couldn't compete with that: that's where the Afro came from. We were never gonna be able to copy the Beatles cut ...' The 'new' style was even associated with a 'new' haircut that the originators couldn't grow!

It must've felt like a hijack. But that doesn't preclude them making money from the boom.


Zeppelin was accused of outright plagiarism, which I believe was settled for mega bucks outside court.

 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 6:48 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

Wahhhhhh!

 
 Posted:   Feb 10, 2018 - 6:50 PM   
 By:   'Lenny Bruce' Marshall   (Member)

As long as you dont like prog-rock....

We be cool.


I don't mind a little, OLD OLD King Crimson.

But, othat.


Oh yeah. First lp is a classic

 
 Posted:   Feb 27, 2018 - 4:50 PM   
 By:   Octoberman   (Member)

Very easy, especially when your implied racism in your post is glaring.
MV



Exactly which post is it you are referring to, MV?
I'm especially interested to know if it's the phrase "street cred" and, if it is, then why you think it has some specific race attached to it.
But I am giving you a chance to clarify--maybe it was something else.



I'm still waiting for a response, MV.
To label me a racist and then not discuss it is neither mature nor professional.
I'm still giving you the benefit of the doubt that it might have been someone else's post that you were referring to.
Either way, I think some clarification is warranted.

 
 Posted:   Feb 27, 2018 - 4:59 PM   
 By:   Justin Boggan   (Member)

Over at another board I go to, the interview was scene a different way, with the headline reading something like: Another old guy complains about modern music

 
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