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Post by Chea on Dec 3, 2009 7:39:16 GMT -5
Hi Jeff. One of the best parts in the DVD i like best I think is D.Pegg playing and singing "Jack Frost and the Hooded Crow" .The duo you were talking about,they were recently married. ::)They have a Website in which are available theyr videos and CD.Paul Forrest is the artist's name. Mi wife had an operation the same day of the accident.11 nails in the leg.If all goes well,at the end of January,another operation to remove them.All that for a stupid accident... I'have also read the good new about Mick! ;)Bye.Michele.
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Post by Mix on Dec 3, 2009 11:29:41 GMT -5
Isn't Paul Forrest the guy out of the Dayglo Pirates Tull tribute band?
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Post by Nonfatman on Dec 3, 2009 20:50:39 GMT -5
Isn't Paul Forrest the guy out of the Dayglo Pirates Tull tribute band? I think you are right about that Mix, and they are an excellent tribute band. Jeff
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Post by Chea on Dec 4, 2009 2:57:53 GMT -5
Isn't Paul Forrest the guy out of the Dayglo Pirates Tull tribute band? Hallo Mix.Yes he is.
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Ulla
One of the Youngest of the Family
Posts: 99
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Post by Ulla on Dec 4, 2009 4:45:23 GMT -5
Isn't Paul Forrest the guy out of the Dayglo Pirates Tull tribute band? I think you are right about that Mix, and they are an excellent tribute band. Jeff They are really good. But because Paul is going to move to Israel, The Dayglo Pirates are going to have their last gig in January.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Dec 20, 2009 15:18:39 GMT -5
it went to good cause....right, I pre order from Amazon UK
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Post by TM on Dec 20, 2009 21:39:53 GMT -5
entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/cd_reviews/article6959054.eceHere’s a 2003 studio set of retooled seasonal songs from the venerable progressive rockers, including a dispiritingly sober update of Ring out Solstice Bells and a second disc, taped at a carol service last Christmas at St Bride’s, London, where festive Tull classics, such as the still spritely Jack in the Green, nestle between choral performances and a reading by the television news conduit Gavin Esler. Jethro Tull’s Christmas album isn’t as bewilderingly bizarre as Bob Dylan’s, Christmas in the Heart, but profits go to the homeless and, in an admirably modern move, the sleeve features cautiously counterweighted essays from Tull’s equivocal atheist front man and flautist, Ian Anderson, and St Bride’s prog-rock fan priest, the Rev George Pitcher.
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Post by LJG on Apr 5, 2010 23:33:50 GMT -5
I finally gave parts of St. Brides a listen...
and I confess Ian actually sounds in slightly better voice than I was expecting. I like what I've heard so far.
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Post by Nonfatman on Apr 6, 2010 12:16:48 GMT -5
I finally gave parts of St. Brides a listen... and I confess Ian actually sounds in slightly better voice than I was expecting. I like what I've heard so far. Hi, Luke! You are right, Ian is still capable of good vocal performances, especially in the studio and in quieter settings like St. Brides. He sang most of the setlist surprisingly well during last year's solo acoustic tours, and fairly well during the 40th anniversary shows in 2008 as well. However, the 2007 shows were abysmal. It really is a hit or miss thing these days. There are many shows where his vocals completely abandon him and it is just plain embarassing to watch. Jeff
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Post by LJG on Apr 6, 2010 23:33:44 GMT -5
He sang most of the setlist surprisingly well during last year's solo acoustic tours, and fairly well during the 40th anniversary shows in 2008 as well. However, the 2007 shows were abysmal. Jeff The last show I saw was Nov. 2007 (Montreal). Such is life. I should hunt down some more of the solo stuff from the past couple years.
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Post by Nonfatman on Apr 7, 2010 10:52:59 GMT -5
He sang most of the setlist surprisingly well during last year's solo acoustic tours, and fairly well during the 40th anniversary shows in 2008 as well. However, the 2007 shows were abysmal. Jeff The last show I saw was Nov. 2007 (Montreal). Such is life. I should hunt down some more of the solo stuff from the past couple years. What was your impression of that show, Luke? The one I saw in New Jersey was awful. I almost wrote them off after that show, because although it was billed as a Jethro Tull show, most of it was orchestral/instrumental, with a string quartet performing a medley of SFTW and HH without Ian (except for the end when he popped up with a few flute lines), and then there were covers of other bands' songs and, perhaps worst of all, Grimminimelli's Lament. Plus, the singing (what little of it there was) was just terrible. Jeff
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