Quel souvenir ! c'était la toute première émission Chorus le dimanche à midi et demi et c'était du vrai LIVE . Je découvrais DR FEELGOOD à 26 ans . J'en ai 72 à présent et j'écoute toujours régulièrement Dr Feelgood surtout cette époque là avec Gipie Mayo à la gratte ! Quelle pêche d'enfer et j'adorais Lee Brillaux formidable bête de scène .
I was just to young to see this line up which has always been my favourite. Gypie Mayo was no disgrace to his illustrious predecessor and he created his own clear identity. Great songs and great albums from '77 to '81 when Gypie, sadly, left the band. I must have seen Dr Feelgood hundreds of times after this but I regret that I never saw this line up, this film shows them at their peak in '78.
Lee Brilleaux è il più anfetaminico dei bluesman che abbiano calcato le scene del R&R, direi che è un fantastico esemplare unico ; dalla fine degli anni '70 ho avuto la fortuna di vedere diversi concerti dei Dr. Feelgood con svariate formazioni, compresa l'attuale, e questa con John Mayo è molto buona, anche se non a livello di quella con Wilko Johnson, imho. Immortali Dr. Feelgood, amore eterno da parte mia 😍🤩🥰
@@ailurophile17 Actually there are 2 real Dr. Feelgood. The one with Wilko and the one with Gypie. Saw them both. For me Gypie was a brilliant guitarist for technical range , tone , feeling , intensity. Saw them around the time of this video at the Bataclan in Paris, I did not missed Wilko that night for a second:)
They not only lost a unique guitar player, they lost their songwriter. Still very good afterwards, but they largely stopped playing the Wilko material, which was 'Feelgood' blueprint
@ Bob Sterling. I never saw Feelgood with Wilco. First saw them in New Zealand a couple of times circa Mad Man Blues in the mid 80s and in London a couple of times in 1990. I last saw them in Raynors Lane (Full concert on my channel here). In my opinion the soul died completely after Lee died. I only found out last week that Wilco died after randomly reading Classic Rock Mag in a shop.
@@groovedohg with Wilco they were raw and vibrant, he led the sound and Lee ruled the vocals and was the showman. They never had the same level after Wilco left and basically were no longer Feelgood after Lee died.
@@bobstirling6885 oui…nope…so what d you make of this if this line up don t rip the joint apart…of course Gypie was the purfect replacement for wilko. A gift from the R’n’R gods