Carl Wayne (of The Move), Steve Winwood, Jimi Hendrix, John Mayall, and Eric Burdon, May 31, 1968
37 notes
·
View notes
The Move - Roy Wood - Jeff Lynne
16 notes
·
View notes
I lost my industrial sized bottle of cholula in the war
8 notes
·
View notes
Bev Bevan (drummer of the Move) serves John Bonham with an album in his newly opened record store ‘Heavyhead Records’. Sparkhill, Birmingham, 1971.
54 notes
·
View notes
The Move - Roy Wood - Jeff Lynne
52 notes
·
View notes
2022 my favourite albums
(The higher, the earlier in the year. More or less)
14 notes
·
View notes
(Rant Post)
I just don’t get it. Why on God’s green earth did Jeff Lynne CHOOSE to make shitty music from 1970-1973 when he knew damn well how to make amazing songs even then?? It’s not the fact that he made shitty songs then that pisses me off. If that’s where he started musically it would make sense. Nobody sounds good in the beginning of their career. But no. It’s the fact he made amazing songs before he joined the Move and ELO that really sets me off. If you’ve ever listened to the Idle Race you’d know what I’m talking about. Keep in mind that he made / was a part of 5 yes 5! ALBUMS! Over the course of 1970-1973. That’s five albums he could’ve been making much, much better music, but he didn’t. Looking On, Message from the Country, The Electric Light Orchestra, ELO 2, and On the Third Day could’ve been WAY better if he kept doing what he was doing in the Idle Race. I just don’t understand why. Did he think the msuic he made in the idle race wasn’t good enough? Did he think that making progressive experimental garbage that nobody likes was good? I just don’t get it.
10 notes
·
View notes
Jimi Hendrix/The Move @ The Royal Albert Hall; November 14, 1967.
Poster art : Des Dale for Osiris Visions Ltd.
150 notes
·
View notes