WELCOME to Stevie's Vinyl Cupboard .... @SteviesVinylCupboard
Vinyl records, stored in a cupboard presented by me, Stevie. (obviously ; ) Join me as I go through my Vinyl record collection, resurrecting, cleaning, storing, & eventually maybe even playing them on my hi tech audiophile equipment. Reviewing my favourite vinyl LP records, 12" & 7" records, vinyl products and other music memorabilia as well as collecting those vinyl records I always wanted or got lost in the mists of time itself. Early 80s, 80s vinyl, with some late 70s, all presented in a no-nonsense haphazard low tech amateurish way. Plus a bit of arty stuff and music video as well.
Think of this as simply the BEST vinyl record channel out there (and I promise to let you down gently ok).
Interested? Up for a laugh? Bored? Hit SUBSCRIBE pls and don't forget to add interesting n witty comments, thrill me why don't you....
I'd like to monetise the channel to buy ONE record (just one), sound fair enough?
Wow Stevie! This one really got the algorithm’s goat huh! Amazing view count! Congratulations on the boost in subs too! A view count phenomenon. Cheers!
Moon was an anomaly. His technique was sloppy. Held his sticks in an awkward fashion. But at the same time laid down amazing fills and rhythm. Playing lead drums out in the forefront of the tune. Drumming back then was, lay down a reliable back beat and sprinkle in fills on top of the foundational back beat. During many live performances,he didn’t even have a hi hat in his drum kit. Because of this, I don’t think he would have made it in any other band. The band permitted him to play that way. It was a perfect symbiotic relationship. He was great and pure genius.
Huge thanks for finding and putting up this great piece of rock history. The additional info was excellent to see. Hail Scot Halpin for filling the Giant Moo's Shoes! There isnt enough stuff like this on RU-vid!
For thirty years I've been wandering about my life going hmm, that synthesiser sounded like an organ, filter sweep and tremolo but you can see a massive oscillator bank so it must be some kind of synth I never heard of. Pete: yeah I didn't own that synth, I put an organ through a filter and [tremolo].
'From Wiki 'Afterwards, he was taken backstage, along with his friend Mike, joined the band for a drink and snacks, and was given a Who concert jacket, which Halpin said was stolen from him later that night''
I’d be interested if you could elaborate a bit more I always found that Pete could perfectly fill the mid/high range on his own live, and with Moonie and the Ox going for it non-stop they already sound fit to burst with sound
You're wrong, a big part of their power was the way John and Pete interacted together. Listen to going mobile, one acoustic guitar, bass and drums. Sounds like an orchestra.
@@oscardoodles Did the Who play ‘Going Mobile’ live? I can’t seem to find a clip online. Would the synthesizer parts be played by someone else onstage, or on tape-loops?
if you listen to the album-version of Pinball Wizard, you can hear Pete strumming clean chords, and Entwistle sounding-out those big distorted descending notes. You can also hear Entwistle playing crazy chord shapes underneath all that, but live they had to leave that part out. If they had a 2nd guitarist they would be able to play all 3 of those parts. Just little things like that. I still love the Who
There is something really tragic happening and the audience is still yelling and clapping. The artists and the audience are often in a completely different world.
One of the greatest and wackiest moments in all of Rock n Roll history. Scott is my cousin and I was there that night with him. We recently lost him. The band did send him a check for $1,000 afterwards. They told him he saved the show and he really did.
My kid sister and late older brother were both at this concert. My sister told me after that it was so loud in the Palace that you couldn't really hear the drums as an instrument! She said the music was like thunder, which made it hard to discern any particular instrument! But she also said that the stand-in for Keith did a good job!
Rock is sometimes more than the music itself, it's a spectacle. What happens on stage can only have meaning because of the audience. This historic event is the complete merger of the rock spectacle and the audience !!