@jeremy acker yes i liked there first album and argus but then i stopped listening to them! But tbh i couldnt put them up there with deep purple, led zepplin, status quo, the stones, hendrix, queen, those groups have to be on another level? Even when you hear there first albums alone thats enough to make you say "fuck me but they sound brilliant and thats just there first album" i was wasnt born when these groups started but i kind of got into them as you do with music through other people. And i just knew the status quo from about 1978 as a kid and probably from there huge album that year "rocking all over the world" plus the song itself i thought was maybe there best at that time and a few years later. But i was suprised to find out that the quo had been going from 1968 as i looked through a pals record collection, and they had made alot of albums in the early 70s, i think they made 3 albums in 1970 alone? Wich must be a record lol a mean three albums in a year is amazing really and its so hard to do just one album! And they were all brilliant albums. My mate said wait to you hear this and he put on a quo album from mid 1970 and it was the best quo album i think i had heard, strait away i noticed there music wasnt the same as most of it was after 1978 tbh, and its only right i believe to be honest about it, becouse your not kidding any one on except yourself. And going from 1979 into the early 80s there singles to me were just to much alike, infact that much alike when they brought out at least six singles from 79 to 1984 i would always get the names of the songs mixed up and so did so many other people! I think it was an album called "ma kellys greasy spoon" from 1970 i heard and thought it was just brilliant, amazing, it was status quo at there best. And we played it about 5 times as the album went in so fast like every brilliant does. Then i heard another two albums they did in 1971 and i thought they were maybe better than the two or three from 1970, i just cand mind the names of those other albums from 70 to 72, 73, in 74 they had huge success with the brilliant "on the level" album, and from then to 1981 all there albums were brilliant. I remember "if you cant stand the heat" that was also great, from 1976 or 77 i think? I thought there music going into the 80s was alot more disco or like pop music and it wasnt bad it was good music becouse music had changend big time by then and disco was taking over really. It became huge. But pop music was always big since the early 1960s but this was different pop and faster and better plus you got to see it in colour lol and that had a huge impact on it as well. But good band wishbone ash, but i cant put them on this level. To cut a long story short as i could have at the start lol i watched live aid again at wembley from 1985 and if you asked about 3 to 500 fans at live aid "have you ever heard of wishbone ash" how many do you think would say yes? I dont think alot tbh. Maybe 100 out of 500
There's a lot of comments about this lot being underrated but every album from their glory days was a big hit album and they were a really big live draw - if you mean they don't get the credit they deserve nowadays - fair enough - but no one can say they were underrated - they were huge!
Argus was the 3rd album I bought as a teenager. 1st - Deep Purple - Machine Head, 2nd - Neil Young - After The Gold Rush, 3rd - Wishbone Ash - Argus. Still have them today. Took care of them and they still sound great on vinyl.
I discovered this band about 5 years ago. They are a hidden gem of the '70's. Everybody who likes this should seriously listen to the album Argus, it's amazing.
I saw them at the Shubert Theatre in Philly on May 11th, 1973. Grin(Nils Lofgren) opened the show and they blew us away! Then Wishbone Ash played and they changed my life forever. Argus was their set and their sound was perfect! No great technology then, just four musicians who could harmonize and play their instruments to perfection. Time Was and Sometime World changed how I looked at progressive rock. Caravan ended the show with their set from In The Land of Grey and Pink. Martin Turner, Ted Turner, Steve Upton and Andy Powell are Wishbone Ash and that sound will never be duplicated.
One of the most underrated hard rock bands of the history of rock...and essential for the genre. There wouldn't have been an Iron Maiden or a Judas Priest without Wishbone Ash
Perhaps underrated in the sense that they never got commercial airplay and recognition. Certainly not underrated by their fans like me. It was their determination not to give in to selling out and remaining true to their art that made them great. They would have been less of a band if they had buckled under to the pressure to comply with commercial cookie cutter music. Commercial radio's loss is our gain. These guys have been faves of mine since 1973.
The first three albums were utterly unique masterpieces. Then they decided to chase the American AOR dollar, and were never quite the same thereafter. Just an opinion.
This song is an all time rock classic and this is a very sweet and playful version in the original line up with Ted Turner on the Fender. Very enjoyable for all guitar lovers out there!
From the brilliant 1972 studio album Argus. I bought the album in 1973. The first album I ever bought ... and STILL one of the best 10 albums I've ever heard. Their first 3 albums plus their 5th and 7th albums - all from the 1970s - are terrific !
I love both Powell's and Turner's different ways of playing. I love all the wild licks from Andy, but Ted can play very slowly with so much feeling. 2:17 for example, so much music i that guitar bend. Gotta love them both. Wishbone Ash is truly an inspiration for a young guitarist like me.
I was in to county music in 73 . Was just starting to get into that scene. Now I am getting into stuff more often that I am older. Don't know what I was missing
The first time I saw W.A. was in Colorado Springs, in 1973, when I was 15. This really brings back memories. They had the same stage setup. Andy and Martin even were wearing the same clothes. Ted's lap steel was about 20 feet away. They were fantastic. Saw them again in 2019 in Denver. They were still pretty good.
I discovered Wishbone Ash in the mid seventies and couldn't stop hear their melodic Guitars for many Years. Now i rediscovered them and im still fascinated. Good Music never dies.
I saw them warm up in the Chicago area for Jonny Winter, in the early 70’s… great show.. the “live dates” double album came out about the same time . They were so good
I first heard them when I was stationed in Germany after being drafted in 1970. I was over there from 72 to 73. When I heard them I liked them and I bought their albums . I think it was a while before they got anything going in the states. Lots of competition for them back in those days.
I grew up on Long Island listening to this band on commercial & college radio, back when radio was real. This band was a hot item (to me) back in them days early to mid 70's. They weren't as known as other bands but they were still known. 'New England' was one of my favorite albums back in them long gone days! This band and this music brings them days back. You just don't get guitar players like this anymore, whereas back then they came a dime a dozen.....ie, Gary Duncan (Quicksilver Messenger Service), Alvin Lee, Nils Lofgren, David Jenkins (Pablo Cruise...(listen to their song El Varano), Kelvin Holley of The Amazing Rhythm Aces (listen to their song Living in a world unknown)..... The list is long! Henry Paul, Toy Caldwell (Marshall Tucker Band), John Gatto (The Good Rats)........There were so many! Roy Buchanan.
Goin down the rabbit hole is what a friend calls it when you keep clicking on more and more old rick videos on you tube. I call it remembering how great all the bands were from my youth.
Eee - takes me back to Sheffield City Hall - Argus Tour. We were the original moshers in the front row! Ted and Andy were brilliant at twin-lead harmony guitar playing! Don't let anyone tell you Thin Lizzie invented it - Ash were the pioneers.
....the first time I was hypnotized by this song was 1975. Now it's 2020 and when I hear it again, it feel's like in a time machine back to my youth. Merry Christmas and greetings from Germany
Argus mnie powalił w tamtym czasie jak była premiera albumu - i do teraz mogę słuchac kilka razy w tygodniu - a jak przypomina kiedy byłem młody ten samak tej muzyki czuję i cofam się w czasie jak przymknę oczy i znowu jestem młody - Rengi from Poland!🤠✌️🎸🌹
I saw wishbone ash at the hollywood paladium on the first couple of tours with my chest right up against the stage getting the full blast sutch a wonderfull band !
@@peterandrews1177 I agree about the line up - and the first 3 albums are amazing - the rest fair to middling, but New England is a fantastic album with Wisefield's playing.
Loved these guys...& like all bands around this time(late 60's & 70's)Led Zeppelin did overshadow many of these great bands.Uriah Heep,Jethro Tull,The Who,Jefferson Airplane,Black Sabbath,Deep Purple ,Humble Pie ,10 Years After...too many to mention.I play Blowin' Free on my 12 string Epiphone.Truly loved (still do) these & all of OUR generation's bands! Baby Boomers Rock !
just bow your head and remember. how lucky we were to of had all that tight ass music back then. it will stand the test of time. i listen and fill it like it was the first time yee haw
I have been playing this band for a long time. My grandma bought me WB Argus and Atomic Rooster in 1972 or 73. Wishbone Ash and The Climex Blues band played in Fargo North Dakota fall 1973 they were both fresh from over the big pond. They both put on a great night. I have wanted a flying V guitar ever since that night!
Saw Wishbone Ash in Torquay in 1970. They were support for the Keef Hartley Band. Phoenix was the outstanding moment of the night. Saw them at every opportunity after that. Tightest band I've ever heard. Superb.
Martin Turner......what a bassist. One of the best of all time and there were some damn great bass players. Chris Squire was my favourite, but this guy could give him a run for his money.
WOW! That was one of my favorite albums. I always thought of all the live albums I had or heard, this was the BEST of any live album. WOW! AND I STILL HAVE IT.
I just heard this song few hours ago in my mom's car on her radio. It's bloody fantastic! To think that I just discovered it. Good music was really diverse in the '70s
I went to see Wishbone Ash in 1971 and again in 1974,they were great. I was a big fan of the 1st 3 albums, I played Argos all the time. It was the first time i saw a gibson flying V, always wanted one, when I got one I could not get on with it, so part ex't it for a 335.
I saw the band when Laurie Wisefield was still in at a small club back in the early 80's. It was a great show. I managed to get right up to the stage and shook Steve Upton's hand at the end!
I saw them in Wisconsin, (La Crosse I believe) back in the early 70s. Became a fan immediately. Their sound was so mysterious and intoxicating! I had never heard a band that sounded anymore unique than they did. Medieval like lyrics and harmonies with melodically driven double lead guitars. Truly underrated!
Ozark Gypsy, that's a wonderful tribute right there. That's what captivated me in '72 when I first heard the Pilgrimage album as a 13 year old, then went out and bought Argus which hadn't long been out. I'm very happy that you got the Englishness of the band. My respects to you and our great friends in the US from England, and I hope that all goes well for you.
Holy fucking crap, this is awesome! Don't you just love it when you discover a piece of music 35 years old that beats the crap out of pretty much everything out there today...
I was never moving on past Wishbone Ash and Humble Pie.they were always in the real mix of what rocking was about.kinda like keepers of the flame .or maybe torch bearers .
The first three Wishbone Ash albums are some of the finest rock ever, especially the twin lead guitars!
Argus is one of the most important albums ever made. Captures the human condition all too well.
@jeremy acker yes i liked there first album and argus but then i stopped listening to them! But tbh i couldnt put them up there with deep purple, led zepplin, status quo, the stones, hendrix, queen, those groups have to be on another level? Even when you hear there first albums alone thats enough to make you say "fuck me but they sound brilliant and thats just there first album" i was wasnt born when these groups started but i kind of got into them as you do with music through other people. And i just knew the status quo from about 1978 as a kid and probably from there huge album that year "rocking all over the world" plus the song itself i thought was maybe there best at that time and a few years later. But i was suprised to find out that the quo had been going from 1968 as i looked through a pals record collection, and they had made alot of albums in the early 70s, i think they made 3 albums in 1970 alone? Wich must be a record lol a mean three albums in a year is amazing really and its so hard to do just one album! And they were all brilliant albums. My mate said wait to you hear this and he put on a quo album from mid 1970 and it was the best quo album i think i had heard, strait away i noticed there music wasnt the same as most of it was after 1978 tbh, and its only right i believe to be honest about it, becouse your not kidding any one on except yourself. And going from 1979 into the early 80s there singles to me were just to much alike, infact that much alike when they brought out at least six singles from 79 to 1984 i would always get the names of the songs mixed up and so did so many other people! I think it was an album called "ma kellys greasy spoon" from 1970 i heard and thought it was just brilliant, amazing, it was status quo at there best. And we played it about 5 times as the album went in so fast like every brilliant does. Then i heard another two albums they did in 1971 and i thought they were maybe better than the two or three from 1970, i just cand mind the names of those other albums from 70 to 72, 73, in 74 they had huge success with the brilliant "on the level" album, and from then to 1981 all there albums were brilliant. I remember "if you cant stand the heat" that was also great, from 1976 or 77 i think? I thought there music going into the 80s was alot more disco or like pop music and it wasnt bad it was good music becouse music had changend big time by then and disco was taking over really. It became huge. But pop music was always big since the early 1960s but this was different pop and faster and better plus you got to see it in colour lol and that had a huge impact on it as well. But good band wishbone ash, but i cant put them on this level. To cut a long story short as i could have at the start lol i watched live aid again at wembley from 1985 and if you asked about 3 to 500 fans at live aid "have you ever heard of wishbone ash" how many do you think would say yes? I dont think alot tbh. Maybe 100 out of 500
@@alanmctavish4802Love the way you say 'to cut a long story short'...after re writing War and Peace... bless.
Wishbone Ash were one of the best groups around in the early 70s, Argus was voted best album of 1972. All of the early albums were great.
And not only the early😉
Un groupe. Parfait Xavier.
yeah, the twin guitar attack was copied by many later bands. Unfortunately they lacked a strong singer
77's Front Page News was fantastic too. Laurie Wisefield was a great replacement for Ted. He got some great praise from Robin Trower
The Argus album was CLASS, always been a favourite of mine for the last 50 years
There's a lot of comments about this lot being underrated but every album from their glory days was a big hit album and they were a really big live draw - if you mean they don't get the credit they deserve nowadays - fair enough - but no one can say they were underrated - they were huge!
Thanks Neil for pointing that out! I saw these guys a couple of times back then and it's still almost as fresh in my memory as when it happened.
mostly on uk probably thats why
Absolutely, I saw them at a packed out gig in Bradford in 1973. Superb concert.
I can recall seeing a billboard for a concert they were playing in Tempe , Arizona, and Kiss was the opening act . That was sometime in mid- 1975 .
You're right, there's nothing underrated about wishbone Ash. I had all their albums and Simon concert
Wishbone Ash 4 me one of the best Bands ever --only GREAT music
This is a masterpiece. Argus is one of the best rock albums ever.
Yes indeed
Argus was the 3rd album I bought as a teenager. 1st - Deep Purple - Machine Head, 2nd - Neil Young - After The Gold Rush, 3rd - Wishbone Ash - Argus. Still have them today. Took care of them and they still sound great on vinyl.
this band is seriously the most underrated band ever. people should talk about these guys like they do with beatles, rolling stones, jimi hendrix etc.
one of the most talented and most underated BANDS EVER!
I'm old but this is good, hard to explain, you probably had to be there.
It’s still good. I would start a tribute band in SW Florida if I could find some sober musicians.
Now this is great Wishbone ash and Uriah Heep 2 of the best
Fantastic band one of the best Britain has produced they are brilliant.
I discovered this band about 5 years ago. They are a hidden gem of the '70's. Everybody who likes this should seriously listen to the album Argus, it's amazing.
Terrific live sound. This original lineup was the best. Dug 'em in the 70s, still do today.
Laurie Wisefield filled Ted's shoes pretty darn good though
I saw them at the Shubert Theatre in Philly on May 11th, 1973. Grin(Nils Lofgren) opened the show and they blew us away! Then Wishbone Ash played and they changed my life forever. Argus was their set and their sound was perfect! No great technology then, just four musicians who could harmonize and play their instruments to perfection. Time Was and Sometime World changed how I looked at progressive rock. Caravan ended the show with their set from In The Land of Grey and Pink. Martin Turner, Ted Turner, Steve Upton and Andy Powell are Wishbone Ash and that sound will never be duplicated.
When Argus came out, in the heyday of rock, it blew everyone away.
It is unfortunate that less than a million people have heard the greatest song ever written.
One of the most underrated hard rock bands of the history of rock...and essential for the genre.
There wouldn't have been an Iron Maiden or a Judas Priest without Wishbone Ash
What a wonderful legacy to upload here. Respect!
This band at it's absolute Zenith. Ted Turner's subdued Strat playing during this era was beautiful !!! A twin guitar attack like no other !!!
Makes me feel 21 years old again....
My favorite band. Seen them 5 times live (most recently in 2023).
One of the most creative yet underrated bands of their era.
Adrian Trott underrated???????????
For you!!!! Only!!!
Perhaps underrated in the sense that they never got commercial airplay and recognition. Certainly not underrated by their fans like me. It was their determination not to give in to selling out and remaining true to their art that made them great. They would have been less of a band if they had buckled under to the pressure to comply with commercial cookie cutter music. Commercial radio's loss is our gain. These guys have been faves of mine since 1973.
If anyone was underrated, it would be Martin Turner on bass. That guy was way up in the pantheon of great players.
Adrian Trott without a doubt one of the best bands of all time
The first three albums were utterly unique masterpieces. Then they decided to chase the American AOR dollar, and were never quite the same thereafter. Just an opinion.
とにかくカッコイイ‼️‼️‼️
この時代に戻って生で聴きたかったぁ✨❤️🥰❤️✨
The best band almost everyone never heard of .
They were feckin' huge!
Anyone that knows diddly squat about rock knows this band.
Saw these guys about 4 times between '70 and '71
Always great!
This song is an all time rock classic and this is a very sweet and playful version in the original line up with Ted Turner on the Fender. Very enjoyable for all guitar lovers out there!
one of the best two lead guitar bands of there time
From the brilliant 1972 studio album Argus.
I bought the album in 1973. The first album I ever bought ... and STILL one of the best 10 albums I've ever heard.
Their first 3 albums plus their 5th and 7th albums - all from the 1970s - are terrific !
Even #8 is fantastic to me Front Page News. Especially Surface to Air. czcams.com/video/BGNxkOJz8bA/video.htmlsi=EZLr1ZLZCGslIOyi
Argus was one of the greatest albums ever.
I saw Wishbone Ash late 80s and they were brill
I love both Powell's and Turner's different ways of playing. I love all the wild licks from Andy, but Ted can play very slowly with so much feeling. 2:17 for example, so much music i that guitar bend. Gotta love them both. Wishbone Ash is truly an inspiration for a young guitarist like me.
An absolutely magnificent and awesome band. All 4 of this extremely talented musicians are AMAZING!!
I was in to county music in 73 . Was just starting to get into that scene. Now I am getting into stuff more often that I am older. Don't know what I was missing
Must have listened to this album about 5,000 times or more. Never, ever tire of it. One of THE great rock albums. They were bloody good live, too.
The best live Rockband all time..🎸🎸
The first time I saw W.A. was in Colorado Springs, in 1973, when I was 15. This really brings back memories. They had the same stage setup. Andy and Martin even were wearing the same clothes. Ted's lap steel was about 20 feet away. They were fantastic. Saw them again in 2019 in Denver. They were still pretty good.
Great song writing, singing, drumming and guitar playing.
Wishbone Ash. Thoroughly British and extremely good.
UK, USA and ANZACS Forever.
I discovered Wishbone Ash in the mid seventies and couldn't stop hear their melodic Guitars for many Years. Now i rediscovered them and im still fascinated. Good Music never dies.
メッチャカッコイイ‼️
大好き💕
I saw them warm up in the Chicago area for Jonny Winter, in the early 70’s… great show.. the “live dates” double album came out about the same time . They were so good
Amazing masterpiece from the summer of my years.
Ted Turner what a guitarist!
they make it look so easy.. but to play such simple music in a so fanastic way.. now that's a task.
I saw them in Auckland, New Zealand in 1973. I was right in front of Ted - just blew me away!! Man those were the days..
Wish I WAS THerE with JEFF Fenton
The 69-74 best line up that produced the legendary masterpiece of an album we have all come to know.
No discredit to Laurie I liked Ash better with Ted
Late 60's up to the 70's is beyond contestation the greatest era of beautiful music and great bands..Wishbone Ash for one🤟
WISHBONE ASH! those 2 guitars are freakin' EPIC!
Classic song, classic musicianship. Enough said.
OMG how i love this sound.
The LEGEND never die.
They was, they are and they will the legend.
Brilliant band
I first heard them when I was stationed in Germany after being drafted in 1970. I was over there from 72 to 73. When I heard them I liked them and I bought their albums . I think it was a while before they got anything going in the states. Lots of competition for them back in those days.
A child of 92. A big fan of Wishbone Ash
Thank you god for the best classic rock band Wishbone Ash. Perfect concert in 2010 in Poland!
Great music...epic era for timeless rock to blossom....we will never see it again
I grew up on Long Island listening to this band on commercial & college radio, back when radio was real. This band was a hot item (to me) back in them days early to mid 70's. They weren't as known as other bands but they were still known. 'New England' was one of my favorite albums back in them long gone days! This band and this music brings them days back. You just don't get guitar players like this anymore, whereas back then they came a dime a dozen.....ie, Gary Duncan (Quicksilver Messenger Service), Alvin Lee, Nils Lofgren, David Jenkins (Pablo Cruise...(listen to their song El Varano), Kelvin Holley of The Amazing Rhythm Aces (listen to their song Living in a world unknown)..... The list is long! Henry Paul, Toy Caldwell (Marshall Tucker Band), John Gatto (The Good Rats)........There were so many! Roy Buchanan.
Goin down the rabbit hole is what a friend calls it when you keep clicking on more and more old rick videos on you tube.
I call it remembering how great all the bands were from my youth.
Eee - takes me back to Sheffield City Hall - Argus Tour. We were the original moshers in the front row! Ted and Andy were brilliant at twin-lead harmony guitar playing! Don't let anyone tell you Thin Lizzie invented it - Ash were the pioneers.
My brother and i played the first two albums until they were worn out--this is music that gets into your soul
I came to Japan all the way from Canaduh free with a sofa - believe it, or not. Life can be strange and wonderful. Thanks Frank! R.I.P.
They were so good.
The great Wishbone Ash and early-Grand Funk Railroad have always been a great influence in my youth and still are
....the first time I was hypnotized by this song was 1975. Now it's 2020 and when I hear it again, it feel's like in a time machine back to my youth.
Merry Christmas and greetings from Germany
Nein Friend,old school rockd
Es wäre so schön wieder da hingehen zu dürfen- hingehen und nie wieder zurück kommen..
@@MsSoulProvider Stimmt!
Argus mnie powalił w tamtym czasie jak była premiera albumu - i do teraz mogę słuchac kilka razy w tygodniu - a jak przypomina kiedy byłem młody ten samak tej muzyki czuję i cofam się w czasie jak przymknę oczy i znowu jestem młody - Rengi from Poland!🤠✌️🎸🌹
Uwielbiam ten zespół.
I was 17 when this album came out. Still play it, nothing has come close since.
My first one was PILGRIMAGE and totally blew me away!!!
I saw wishbone ash at the hollywood paladium on the first couple of tours with my chest right up against the stage getting the full blast sutch a wonderfull band !
Theory of music? This is my generation, no labels other than Great Rock N Roll
Happy to say that I saw Wishbone Ash perform this song in concert (circa 1973).
Wishbone Ash, you were absolutely superb and your tracks were in a world of there own. Incredible, as good today as they were fifty years ago.
This band was criminally underrated in the rock era.I saw them live many times in the early mid 70's a great live band
The best lineup,Turner,Upton,Turner,Powell
ABSOLUTELY!
The ONLY line up as far as I'm concerned, first 4 albums all great , then not the same when Ted left
@@peterandrews1177 I agree about the line up - and the first 3 albums are amazing - the rest fair to middling, but New England is a fantastic album with Wisefield's playing.
Amen.
again simply brilliant ...you have to pity those who never heard WA
fantatic song from fantastic band....
Loved these guys...& like all bands around this time(late 60's & 70's)Led Zeppelin did overshadow many of these great bands.Uriah Heep,Jethro Tull,The Who,Jefferson Airplane,Black Sabbath,Deep Purple ,Humble Pie ,10 Years After...too many to mention.I play Blowin' Free on my 12 string Epiphone.Truly loved (still do) these & all of OUR generation's bands! Baby Boomers Rock !
I don't agree. Zeppelin turned a lot of people OFF me included because they were quite Satanic and occult obsessed.
This Band still is one of the Best guitarbands ever
saw them twice in 1972 at THE WAREHOUSE in New Orleans one of the great bands of the 70's
just bow your head and remember. how lucky we were to of had all that tight ass music back then. it will stand the test of time. i listen and fill it like it was the first time yee haw
I have been playing this band for a long time. My grandma bought me WB Argus and Atomic Rooster in 1972 or 73. Wishbone Ash and The Climex Blues band played in Fargo North Dakota fall 1973 they were both fresh from over the big pond. They both put on a great night. I have wanted a flying V guitar ever since that night!
Saw Wishbone Ash in Torquay in 1970. They were support for the Keef Hartley Band.
Phoenix was the outstanding moment of the night. Saw them at every opportunity after that. Tightest band I've ever heard. Superb.
One of the best bands of all times.
Martin Turner......what a bassist. One of the best of all time and there were some damn great bass players. Chris Squire was my favourite, but this guy could give him a run for his money.
saw them in Columbus about 1974, to this day, still one of the best concerts I have ever seen.
Mindblowing. Would have loved to see them back then.
the best double lead guitar band ever.
First 3 albums were brillant
+matt naughton agree , something went wrong with the sound on 4 , but good songs - after always better live .Just Testing songs much better live .
yep
allmans
I saw the Allman Bros a lot! But, I'll agree
happy to see them live
WOW! That was one of my favorite albums. I always thought of all the live albums I had or heard, this was the BEST of any live album. WOW! AND I STILL HAVE IT.
Pure class
Vastly underrated band in N. America. Almost forgotten now. Too bad. They arrived late to the market, as rock was dying and disco was coming in.
I'm 22 and have been a Grand Funk fan since I was 9 or so. My dad grew up with the best music for a reason.
I just heard this song few hours ago in my mom's car on her radio. It's bloody fantastic! To think that I just discovered it. Good music was really diverse in the '70s
saw them a few days ago at the weyfest in farnham u.k still very good live band!!!!!!!!!!!!
Everyone calls Ash underated, but all of us had this 8track in our cars in 1976
I went to see Wishbone Ash in 1971 and again in 1974,they were great. I was a big fan of the 1st 3 albums,
I played Argos all the time. It was the first time i saw a gibson flying V, always wanted one, when I got one I could not get on with it, so part ex't it for a 335.
I saw the band when Laurie Wisefield was still in at a small club back in the early 80's. It was a great show. I managed to get right up to the stage and shook Steve Upton's hand at the end!
Love Davey Murray of Iron Maiden’s playing so of course I love Andy’s playing as well!
Revelations!
Saw wishbone ash in the seventies budgie was the support band ...... great night
I saw them in Wisconsin, (La Crosse I believe) back in the early 70s. Became a fan immediately. Their sound was so mysterious and intoxicating! I had never heard a band that sounded anymore unique than they did. Medieval like lyrics and harmonies with melodically driven double lead guitars. Truly underrated!
Ozark Gypsy, that's a wonderful tribute right there. That's what captivated me in '72 when I first heard the Pilgrimage album as a 13 year old, then went out and bought Argus which hadn't long been out. I'm very happy that you got the Englishness of the band. My respects to you and our great friends in the US from England, and I hope that all goes well for you.
@@tonyanderton3521 Thanks for your kind respects Tony. I hope all goes well for you and yours too, especially during such difficult times.
SUPERB description.
🇬🇧🇺🇸
@@steffanhoffmann8937 Thank you sir!
Holy fucking crap, this is awesome! Don't you just love it when you discover a piece of music 35 years old that beats the crap out of pretty much everything out there today...
I was never moving on past Wishbone Ash and Humble Pie.they were always in the real mix of what rocking was about.kinda like keepers of the flame .or maybe torch bearers .
The good old times. I love it so much ! ! !