Entertainment For Lively Minds

Word RSS FeedsWord Magazine on YouTubeWord Magazine on Last FMWord Magazine on Share My PlaylistsWord Spotify PlaylistsWord Magazine on FacebookWord Magazine on Twitter

All Groups Must Pass

Peter Hilgendorf's picture

When we lose a Bo Didley, a Buckley, or a Jimi Hendrix, we lose the whole thing. There is no distant family member to step in and keep the thing alive.

Are there any major groups, since the dawn of the rock & roll, whose members have all passed on?

These are close but hanging on...
The Temptations
Lynyrd Skynyrd
Badfinger
Righteous Bros
Jan & Dean
Milli Vanilli....

0

Not quite...

The Bar-Keys and The Ramones are the closest I can think of.

0
Fraser Lewry | 4 June 2008 - 11:08pm

NOEL REDDING JIMI HENDRIX

For more information contact 3sixtypr@gmx.com

JIMI HENDRIX MURDERED? “NOT IMPROBABLE” SAYS NOEL REDDING...

The name Jimi Hendrix conjures up some of the most colourful and wildest moments that the sixties produced. Hendrix arrived, he conquered and took the music world by storm, got inside your head and went onto the great gig in the sky - all by the age of 27.

The Jimi Hendrix Experience , left you in no doubt that it was exactly that – an experience.

A trio of musicians who came together from both sides of the Atlantic and found common ground, fame and for one third of the group not very much fortune.

For Noel Redding the bass player in the group the experience was not to be forgotten. Since the death of Hendrix 40 years ago, much as been documented about him and the group.

Looking back to the sixties and you could be thinking you are on another planet. Any history relating to that period is taken up with music and culture. The Jimi Hendrix Experience played

it's part.

Making a timely appearance is a DVD that is being put out by Discs International, containing a never before seen interview with Noel Redding recorded at his home in Ireland in 1988.

It makes fascinating viewing. All the years of seeing film of them in concert and photographs of Hendrix, Redding and Mitchell, you find yourself sitting in a living room not with just a legend – but an ordinary guy talking about his early days with the group. No rock star here, no pretentious name dropping, just plain talking. Listening to him you are left wondering how they made it to top.

I asked producer Will Scally who had the foresight to record this interview how it all came about.

“ I had known and been friends with Noel for many years and always found him a very upfront, straightforward guy. We often spoke about doing an interview, he wanted to speak about the band, money, drugs and the death of Hendrix and much more – even speaking about the possibility of Hendrix being murdered. He was on good form that day and wanted to record this for posterity.

Sadly Noel Redding died back in 2003 aged 57

For those interested in Hendrix, Redding and the history of sixties rock music this rare visual documentary should not be missed.
The Redding Experience Release date.......................

NOVEMBER 2010.

Barry Levene

0
mnvdiscs | 6 October 2010 - 4:46pm

T. Rex

Flipping the Spinal Tap joke on its head, the drummer, Bill Legend, is the only one who's left - Bolan, Took, Mickey Finn, Steve Currie and Gloria Jones are all gone.

The Sweet are down to 50% now too. Glam: don't try it at home, children.

0
Archie Valparaiso | 5 June 2008 - 12:20am

Is Gloria Jones dead?

I thought i read an interview with her fairly recently. Herbie Flowers and tony Visconti are still around too.

0
Richard Lowe | 5 June 2008 - 8:05am

Oops

Quite right. Thanks, Richard (and sorry, Gloria).

0
Archie Valparaiso | 5 June 2008 - 8:28am

Drummer still standing....

OK, I accept that the Beatles stopped performing long before George and John shuffled off this mortal, but remember Paul died in the 60's: the clues area all there, the guitar wreath on Sgt Peppers spells Paul, he is barefoot on Abbey Rd and the backwards message in the runout groove after Day in the Life ends etc etc.
Can anyone else remember the other "evidence" that "confirmed" this urban myth? (Or it it true?????)

0
Retropath2 | 5 June 2008 - 7:44am

There are still whole websites about this

Here's one of the best of breed.

0
Archie Valparaiso | 5 June 2008 - 8:31am

Jose Feliciano must know

I'm sure he brought out a tribute record called, I think, "Paul is Dead" Pretty conclusive proof you'll agree.

Shame Heather didn't think of this line of attack during the recent divorce!!

0
Gordon Kerr | 5 June 2008 - 9:22am

Not a major group exactly

But The London Boys, a dance/pop duo who had a couple of big hits in the late '80s, were killed together in a car crash a few years ago.

0
Richard Lowe | 5 June 2008 - 8:08am

London Boys

The Twelve Commandments of Dance haunts me to this day,

0
Ben Raworth | 6 June 2008 - 3:39pm

I don't really know about that.....

All we can say with confidence is that Jose hasn't seen Paul since at least 1967! (or indeed anyone, since he was born....)

0
Retropath2 | 5 June 2008 - 9:27am

Not an original observation but...

... I've heard it suggested that the Who and The Beatles should form a group, because in one case the drummer and bass player have died and in the other they are they only ones still standing, and the whole enterprise could be called The Whotles.

0
Gatz | 5 June 2008 - 9:56am

I say Boo to that!

Or is it the Boo.

0
Retropath2 | 5 June 2008 - 10:06am

This is a great idea

It's amazing when you think of football teams of similar vintage, the death rate is a lot higher than it seems to have been among pop groups.

I know that the most dangerous gig in rock is the keyboard player's berth in the Grateful Dead. Pigpen, Keith Godchaux and Brent Mydland have all passed on.

0
David Hepworth | 5 June 2008 - 1:45pm

Ahem..

Scouting for Girls. Sorry, wishful thinking.

0
Mr Drayton | 5 June 2008 - 2:52pm

Marky Ramone...

Marky Ramone is the only Ramone left isn't he?

I'm sure I heard he is selling condoms with the slogan 'Too Tuff To Break' for a good cause.

Chalky

Terrible Love Songs Blog

0
Chalky | 5 June 2008 - 3:50pm

Not if you count original drummer.....

Tommy (also known as soundsman/producer Tommy Erdelyi). And, apparently a host of lesser drummers post Marky I had never heard of, so past the Ramones prime were they.
Another example of the drummers being hardier than the Moon/Bonham experience would seem to show?

0
Retropath2 | 5 June 2008 - 3:56pm
David Hepworth | 6 June 2008 - 3:20am

Drifting away

I interviewed two members of The American Drifters last year as they (or a version of them, I'm not quite sure which) are marketed here in Ireland and it was quite sad and funny at the same time. The band 'leader' took me aside after an awkward chat in which they pretended to be long-serving members and told me, off the record, that his only association to the world of The Drifters was that he had met one of them. That seemed to be enough of a qualification for him.

Oh, and they were shit in concert but still better than a lot of boybands I've had the misfortune of seeing (Westlife last week being one of them)

0
Hot Lunch | 6 June 2008 - 3:52pm

Dead keyboardists...

It's actually four, DH....Vince Welnick killed himself two years back. But Tom Constanten's still standing ;-)

0
Hengus | 6 June 2008 - 9:48pm

RIP the Jimi Hendrix Experience

Hendrix drummer Mitch Mitchell found dead in Portland hotel room

By The Associated Press
PORTLAND < Authorities say Mitch Mitchell, drummer for the legendary Jimi Hendrix Experience of the 1960s, has been found dead in his Portland hotel room.

Erin Patrick, a deputy medical examiner in Multnomah County, says Mitchell was found dead a little after 3 a.m. today in his room at the Benson Hotel in downtown Portland.

She says Mitchell apparently died of natural causes at 62. An autopsy is planned.

Mitchell was touring with the Experience Hendrix Tour, which performed Friday at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in Portland. It was the last stop on the West Coast portion of the tour.

Mitchell performed with other tour members last Thursday at Seattle's Paramount Theater. Seattle Times music critic Patrick MacDonald described Mitchell as looking frail but in good spirits.

Hendrix died in 1970, and Noel Redding, bassist for the trio, died in 2003.

0
Peter Hilgendorf | 13 November 2008 - 1:45am
Privacy Statement    ©  2006 - 2012 Development Hell Ltd