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Tuppy Glossop

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Posts posted by Tuppy Glossop

  1. Really enjoyed the film; great sound, even though I saw it in a small cinema. DG is just one of the great guitarists and I would've loved to have been at the show live. Thought 'Gig in the sky' was slightly spoiled by the screaming vocal, but what a buzz from 'One of these days' .... superb stuff

  2. A load of old cunts in here as well

     

    Oi not so much of the old.....

    January 1965 WBA v Liverpool 3rd round FA cup. My uncle was a massive Baggies fan and had taken his 9 year old nephew to see his team, hoping I'd be inspired. I was; by the magnificent men in red. Ron Yeats was imperious (albeit he gave away a strange penalty, picking up the ball in the penalty area after hearing a whistle, which came from the crowd. Justice done when they missed the penalty). Sir Roger and the Saint scored and we went on to win the Cup.

  3. ​What Faustus said.

    ​I also saw Leonard twice. First as a spotty 15 year old at the Isle of Wight festival in 1970 and second at the NEC on his last tour here in 2013. The 2013 gig was one of the best I've ever been to and I've seen a few greats in my 61 years. I'm the most confirmed atheist there is, but there was a spirit and feeling at the concert that I've rarely felt.   A truly great poet and song writer. 

    As the man said: 

    "Now I bid you farewell,

    I don't know when I'll be back

    They're moving us tomorrow to that tower down the track

    But you'll be hearing from me baby, long after I'm gone

    I'll be speaking to you sweetly

    From a window in the Tower of Song."

     

    It really is ‘Closing Time.’  RIP

    • Upvote 2
  4. Yes, such a great voice; he should've been so much bigger. The River and 'Superlungs' albums often get an airing in our house and bring back great memories of my student days. Went to see Mr Reid in a pub near Dartmouth about ten years ago and wished I hadn't - he was pretty shit, although it could've been an off night. He's touring the UK at this very moment......

    • Upvote 1
  5. Actual health and safety labels put on items -

     

    on a box of fireworks…….do not put lighted fireworks in your mouth

    on the top rung of an aluminium ladder …….STOP!! This is the last rung…..

    on a double mattress……do not attempt to swallow

  6. Pet Sematary is the one that leaves the longest impression - I think because it's based on something we've all done - buried a pet in the garden. I also enjoyed 'Thinner' and 'It' - you never look at a clown in quite the same way after reading It.....

    Strange how the films never come anywhere close to the quality of the books, perhaps apart from the Shining - mostly down to Jack.

  7. "Have you seen the film Message To Love about the 1970 IOW festival? Wish I'd been there."

    No, Gus, I haven't seen the film right through. Is it worth it? (I think I might try and track it down if it is.) I do recall though some of the slightly unnerving antics of the people who were trying to break the perimeter fences down. I seem to recall they were described at the time as the White Panthers..... I was just a sperm who loved music so tried not to pay too much attention to the aggro. To see that sort of lineup on my first trip to a festival was something I'll never forget. The weather was even very kind, just blue skies.....

  8. Some great music on here and I listen to the Blues quite a bit; love the old greats, especially Son House and Leadbelly, but also some of the newer stuff......like Watermelon Slim & The Workers, Derek Trucks Band, Walter Trout Band, Buddy Whittington (played with John Mayall until recently), Eli 'Paperboy' Reed, The Insomniacs.

  9. Erm.....Isle of Wight 1970. Yes, I'm ancient; I was only 15.

    Hendrix, The Doors, The Who, Taste, Free, Family, Ten Years After, Joni Mitchell, John Sebastian, Jethro Tull, ELP, The Groundhogs.......now them were the days

  10. I'm a Humanist (most of the time these days I write and conduct non-religious ceremonies - mainly funerals) so I don't believe in any life after death. I do believe in the wonder of this life and the incredible story of science and evolution that led to animals and humans and I like Philip Pulman's words :

    "Even if death means oblivion, friends, I'll welcome it, because it won't be nothing; we'll be alive again in a thousand blades of grass, and a million leaves, we'll be falling in the raindrops and blowing in the fresh breeze, we'll be glittering in the dew under the stars and the moon, out there in the physical world which is our true home and always was."

     

    Aaaaah........

     

    "Death hides no secret; it opens no door; it is the end of a person. What survives is what he or she has given to other people - what stays in their memory" - Norbert Elias

  11. A true legend... happily I'm old enough to have seen the great man live in 1974 at Birmingham Town Hall. Although I love Safe As Milk -still got it on vinyl - it's 'Strictly Personal' that I play most and it's been getting a lot of airplay in the last few days...... the postman's groovy and strawberry fields foreverrrrr......RIP

  12. Great thread and some great music. I'm working at my desk (at home) so this is first 10 on a 'Media Player' shuffle -

    Love Burns - Black Rebel Motorcycle Club

    Boys Don't Cry - The Cure

    Castles made of Sand - Jimi Henddrix Experience

    Night Life - Joe Bonamassa

    I'm gonna booglarize you baby - Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band

    Sail Away - Neil Young

    Father was a Jockey - John Lee Hooker

    Intermezzo from Sinfonia Antartica - Ralph Vaughan-Williams

    Sky holds the Sun - The Bees

    2129 - Alabama 3

  13. First : Led Zeppelin 1969 Royal Albert Hall (The first Pop Proms) I was a sperm of 14. Work it out.

    Best : V hard. Isle of Wight 1970 Hendrix. Part of musical history, just to have seen the man was enough. If I only have one more choice, then I'll have to go with the Alabama 3, Bristol O2 Academy 2009 great live band IMO (A close run thing with Neil Young at Phoenix 1996, but I can't remember an awful lot about second half of the show.)

    Worst: Nina Simone, Bishopstock Blues Festival 2001. V sad; voice shot to pieces and famous bad attitude to the fore; felt sorry for the band.

  14. Agree with SKI - especially about the angels and stars stuff. Kids are often better at dealing with these matters than we give them credit for. Honesty and compassion and making it clear they've got someone else to talk to as they may not want to talk to mum or dad in case they upset them. There's a 'children and young persons' section giving some good general advice on the Cruse website. Cruse Bereavement Care

  15. I do feel some explanation may be necessary. Well, me and my friend Morris Piper had been having a vodka and Mr Potato Head party the night before. Having got out of our skins drunk, it was one of those nights when you sleep walk and either wake up pissing in someone's wardrobe OR stood up naked at the window trying to change the curtains. When the door bell went (it was my other friend, Edward King, who'd brought the tiny clothes to dress up the potato heads) I woke up in shock and fell backwards onto the table. Unfortunately, Mr Golden Wonder had been left stood on the table and well, he sort of disappeared up my arse. I'll never forget the look in his eyes as I looked back over my shoulder when I fell...."I'm chips" he seemed to be saying, trying to spit out his pipe. The walk to hospital took me a while, but I just thank God that Pumpkin night was last week. So, basically, I deny everything and I'll certainly never drink Smirnoff again.

  16. Atheist ; and I am in fact a paid up member of the British Humanist Association (British Humanist Association). I've never been into any 'ism' before, but when I read up a bit about Humanism a few years ago, I realised I'd been a Humanist for a long time without knowing it. Despite excluding belief in religion, deities or supernatural beings (except Nando and Yoda of course), Humanism is a positive belief in humanity and the spirit and magic of the human mind.

    I am also extremely lucky and privileged to work as a Humanist Funeral Celebrant - I write and conduct non-religious funeral ceremonies for people. Friends of mine couldn't quite get their heads round this when I started doing the work and one started calling me 'The Rev.' (Hence my user-name.) I'm not sure which bit of 'non-religious' he didn't understand, but now I seem to be stuck with the name.......still...into every life a little irony must fall.........

    If anyone on here ever needs any advice about or assistance with a non-religious ceremony, just email me.

  17. On the Antiques Roadshow last night there was a bloke with the original contraption that was the first telephone 'speaking clock.' At the first stroke it will be ten fifty two and twenty seconds precisely etc etc. A while back it stopped working and despite his best efforts he couldn't get it going again. A day or two later he found out that the lady whose voice had been used for his speaking clock had died on the day the machine had stopped.

    Only 5 million viewers of the AR know that....

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