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le freak
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Post subject: In remembrance of "Thick as a Brick" Posted: Tue Aug 06, 2024 2:25 pm |
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Joined: Fri Jun 12, 2009 8:12 pm Posts: 848
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This should be called "Thick as a Brick revisted", as I hadn`t heard the album for 52 years. In fact, I remember very little, but I do remember that obscure oddity on side 2. I wasn´t even out of secondary school when this album came out, a couple of months before Roxy´s debut.
I turned away from the album after a few hearings for simple reasons. This was not blues rock in the manner of their previous albums. The musical interludes sometimes were too hard and the real songs too soft. However, there are some very beautiful interludes that are even softer.
I view the album differently today. Now I´ve made myself a cassette recording of the 1998 brilliant CD remaster. The songs are really tuneful. The harsh Anderson/Barre interludes are to be put up with. Jazz rock fusion stuff, huh?
Side 1 is great, side 2 not so. It sounds as they had enough music for one side plus a rarity that functions as a song in the song, a bit like "The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles" from the follow up. It´s that "-Do You Believe in The Day" thing. It´s too sad. The sadness stands in the way of it´s beauty.
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le freak
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Post subject: Re: In remembrance of "Thick as a Brick" Posted: Wed Aug 21, 2024 12:03 am |
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Joined: Fri Jun 12, 2009 8:12 pm Posts: 848
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Sticking to prog forums and the like, you get the impression that this must be prog heaven, and in this case, rightly so. Yet this album too contains stuff that gives prog a bad name. I´m thinking of the last part of side 2, which begins with some banging out of the main chords from "Do You Believe in The Day" by electric guitar, luckily tried mellowed out by some accompanying soprillo or sopranino saxophone.
To wet your appetite, the "hits" abound; "I Really Don´t Mind", "The Poet and The Painter", "From The Upper Class", You Curl Your Toes in Fun, "Clear White Circles" and the best one; "Childhood Heroes". -Tut-tut-tut!!! (flute).
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le freak
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Post subject: Re: In remembrance of "Thick as a Brick" Posted: Sun Sep 01, 2024 2:25 am |
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Joined: Fri Jun 12, 2009 8:12 pm Posts: 848
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Hmm, It`s hard not to think of the similarites in tune between these ones:
I see you shuffle in the courtroom With your rings upon your fingers And your downy little sidies And your silver-buckle shoes Playing at the hard case You follow the example Of the comic-paper idol Who lets you bend the rules
(Jethro Tull Childhood Heroes 1972)
Well i've been up all night again Party time wasting is too much fun Then I step back thinking Of lifes inner meaning And my latest fling Its the same old story All love and glory Its a pantomime
(Roxy Music Mother of Pearl 1973)
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