Duane Eddy, Manchester, Tue 30 Oct 18

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • Duane Eddy's second concert, Manchester Bridgewater Hall, Tue, 30 Oct 18.
    Recorded on a very small camera, so quality inferior to the concert in London. Early tunes cut short, but some full length ones later. Great to see Albert Lee at this excellent show with the one and only Duane Eddy.

Komentáře • 16

  • @wayneconn1079
    @wayneconn1079 Před 5 lety +2

    I was there 😆 and finally i got to meet my guitar idol . So happy and i have a signed poster what a memory 😊 god bless you Duane

  • @r4ndym4n
    @r4ndym4n  Před 4 měsíci

    His last UK concert. Thank you Duane for your wonderful sound. But no more. 30 Apr 24.

  • @grazel18
    @grazel18 Před 5 lety +2

    I was there, what a fabulous concert. Can't wait fro the next time.

  • @TheJonaco
    @TheJonaco Před 4 lety

    Another great Duane Eddy performance. That looks like a beautiful new hall in Manchester; the sound and pictures are crystal clear. Not as much music as the London show but I like Duane's laid-back manner and "Western-style" humor. Best of all, he still sounds exactly the way he did in that little Arizona studio over 60 (!) years ago. According to an interview I once read, he called
    "Kommotion" something like "Sister Rosetta plays 'Orange Blossom Special'"- or, a bluegrass-style intro and a galloping gospel tempo, introduced by the very influential Sister Rosetta Tharpe decades ago. This rendition sounds much better than the record, which wasn't a huge hit Stateside. Thanks again for this look at my all-time guitar hero! BTW- Tony Macaulay wrote and produced countless Brit-pop hits in the '60s and '70s, and played the exact lick that Duane does on the demo (I think). "Play Me..." was a giant hit across the pond but I don't think it was even released Stateside because, with no distributor here, the label folded not long after its chart run on the Continent. I do have it on an old 2-CD anthology called "Twang Thang" (sic), which has most of Duane's post-'63 singles. I think it would have done very well in America.

  • @martindawson7783
    @martindawson7783 Před 5 lety +3

    I’ve been a Duane Eddy fan since 1958 a schoolboy but this up load is terrible starts a tune then cuts off ...... the man is magic.

    • @FrancescoAlcozer
      @FrancescoAlcozer Před 4 lety +1

      YES 1958 ! czcams.com/video/dcknymmZAzU/video.html *REBEL ROUSER 1958* Guitar cover *Duane Eddy*

  • @rodneypaquin7855
    @rodneypaquin7855 Před 5 lety +4

    Camera seemed to be on only between most of the songs. Lotsa talk.

    • @r4ndym4n
      @r4ndym4n  Před 5 lety +1

      Look at the Palladium video for most of the tunes, andbetter view and quality. There are complete tunes in the second half of this video you will have noticed.

    • @rodneypaquin7855
      @rodneypaquin7855 Před 5 lety +2

      Yes, I watched the Palladium show. I found the sound to be more muddled. Too bad the Manchester clip wasn't all songs. Sound was clearer.

  • @piestingtalerschatzsucher1966

    cool cool >>>>>
    Duane Eddy big nice

  • @guyb7005
    @guyb7005 Před 2 lety

    Choppy

  • @whimpypatrol5503
    @whimpypatrol5503 Před rokem

    This is the pansy stuff that replaced Rockabilly in 1960 after early rock-n-roll artists nearly all got snuffed out, murdered, drafted, sent to prison, or got smart and either stopped playing or switched music genres. That's not to say it's bad music, but it's not anything but extremely watered down and shouldn't be called rock. Even Albert Lee here hasn't hardly seemed to be allowed to show off his rockabilly inspired country guitar playing here. Sad. But, it was better than the other teen music stars of 1960-1962 IMO.