Bloody Hell - I'm feeling my nearly sixty years
Yep, saw Procol Harum and Argent too. Mind you Hold Your Head Up is my worst ever earworm, stuff of my nightmares!
Confirm Roger Quittendon, (Maths teacher) was the brother of the musician who wrote Maggie May. Roger mentioned this at the time.He went to work at Lloyds Registrars after West Tarring. Also the Quittetons were brothers, pretty sure The musical one wrote Maggie May for Rod Stewart and was in the local band Steamhammer. Keith Emerson RIP, another hero gone.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...on-shot-no-longer-perform-perfectly-fans.html
From Mail on Sunday website so might be rubbish.
life begins at 60....i'll have to wait but that's what they say
Just over four months before my life kicks back in
At the Dome? Ditto.
The first 4 LPs I bought were Trilogy, Electric Warrior, Aqualung and Imagine. Only one of these I no longer play . . . . (Imagine).
Good choices. I don't have Electric Warrior, but I do the other three. Often mean to give a Trilogy a run out, but Tarkus was my first ELP, probably because I followed Island releases closely and liked the cover. I well remember the smell and quality finish of Aqualung, a bold and somewhat rebellious choice on my part, but I loved and still play Stand Up and Benefit more. Like you, Imagine doesnt get a look in.
Still following modern music and in quick succession seen Steve Earle, Mary Chapin Capenter, Zac Brown Band, Kate Rusby and Gretchen Peters. Just returned from C2C at the 02 and enjoyed Chris Stapleton, Kacey Musgraves and Eric Church. To my surprise, I may have enjoyed Musgraves the most.
Back in tne day, my close friends had similar tastes in music to me and older generations hadn't heard of acts like ELP and Tull. Now I'm an older generation, none of my contemporaries or anyone I know or work with has heard of any of the others I just listed. Their loss though
RIP Keith guess that now leaves Brian Yeo as maybe the last famous West Tarring old boy still with us.I shall keep any of my famous West Tarring activities and those of others to myself till a later date. West Tarring Academy for louts.
Stone hill used to be owned by J M Barrie, although he didn't stay there much. Not aware of any Lewis Carroll connection. Julian Fellowes did used to live just down the road though; until recently he was President of the Chiddingly Arts Festival.A regular in the 80's at The Six Bells Chiddingly, lived in Lewis Carrolls old house twixt Chiddingly and Horam, not a stones throw from the late Bob Hoskins place.
Stone hill used to be owned by J M Barrie, although he didn't stay there much. Not aware of any Lewis Carroll connection. Julian Fellowes did used to live just down the road though; until recently he was President of the Chiddingly Arts Festival.