As a keyboardist myself, I can say that the knives and stuff don't damage the organ, I mean really it's all part of the showmanship of the song, which actually is pretty badass!
@@benjaminhall2496 I love that everything you read about these guys mentions about how sensitive hammonds were (looping tapes) and how much fucking around it was to set it up for a gig but only side mention what the f he used to do to them....
@@noinfo9130 It was the mellotron that had tape loops and was a pia to tour with. That said, Hammonds have a mechanical tone generator and tube electronics, so not really indestructible.
I saw the band on a Halloween show. Keith donned a mask while he attacked the organ. None of it was impulsive. He puts the knives in specific places to hold the keys down, so he can play other parts
and the throwing it around was the same again, not like the ol just plain 'lets smash this shit the fuck up' destruction of guitards and drums that started with people like The Who
@@manman-wg1xn I just saw that too. I read a comment that the piano was a prop with an electric piano inside that he could play. Not feasible for an actual piano to spin like that..
i think it was purely visual, because acoustic grand cannot play upside down due to gravitation (the hammers would not strike the strings) . But certainly doable with electronic keyboards
This is a sad day when one of your heroes die...Keith was an inspiration to so many keyboard players around the world for decades. The greatest player, performer and showman from the keyboard world that influenced and changed the way people play keyboards today. He will be very missed! RIP Keith!
Never mind that Rondo is a Dave Brubeck tune and few rock keyboardists had the chops or talent learn and play it OR were well studied enough to even the song until Emerson played it. Sadly-all that gets shown is the non-musical aspect of Emerson's work; which is outstanding. He stood head and shoulders above EVERY keyboardist of his and each subsequent era of rock and roll.
Emerson actually WAS a church organist before ELP and the Nice! All those heavy early ELP organ pieces, such as The Three Fates and Infinite Space, were directly inspired by Keith's church organ playing.
a girl I was dating asked my to come and audition for the job of keyboard player (not the organ) at her church where she sang and her mom was choir director. After trying to play with the guitar player..i'm not that good playing with others...i got to fool around with the organ and played some of Light My Fire and Tocatta and Fugue in Dminor (the death song). I don't think her mom was happy about that. Our relationship didn't last long..I think I disappointed her that I wasn't a musician like she was.
meanwhile,the thing is probably still in perfectly functional order to this day...they require some maintenance but man, these things are over engineered and generally very difficult to kill
+James Vincent really? that's surprising to me...I've bashed my hammonds to hell and back...moved them 15 miles in the rain in the back of a pickup truck...you name it...still good to go
anybody that remembers ELP in their prime knows they were dangerous sounding. There was something a bit frightening about them to me as a kid back in the early 70s, and I loved them. Anybody that ever doubts their awesomeness needs to check out the live album from 74 "Welcome back my friends to the show that never Ends" particularly the recording of Tarkus on there. That will settle any debate about their musicianship.
I have been reading Cider with roadies by Stuart Maconie. page 53. Footnote says ' I now know that they were not in fact carving knives but genuine Nazi daggers supplied by Emerson's one-time roadie. Lemmy.'
The most famous and notorious Keith Emerson' stage act. Knives show, rodeo on the organ, playing on keyboard upside down. There's no other player like this
First of all, showing off is part of onstage presence - if you're constantly serious, no matter how good your music is and how good you are at it, people will get bored. Like it or not, but this is how it usually is. Definitely one of the things that make concert even more memorable. Besides, it often actually works for the performance, enhancing it.
@@KazBodnar I haven't attended one, just seen. It has to be said, my original comment is very old and I while I still stand by what I meant by it I should have chosen better words. Basically, what I meant was don't just stand still there like a mummy. It's nice that you can play well, but what about some body language that shows you're having fun which transcribes to the audience? It's no fun just being there emotionless for 1-2 hours straight.
@@FernieCantoStill though, Kraftwerk’s image is about being robotically still and mechanical. To me, boring would be a skinny jeans indie band mumbling over a boring riff while moving less than a corpse
Always love seeing this clip !!! IMHO, Keith Emerson was the greatest keyboardist ever. Saw ELP three times. The second time I saw them, in1992, when he started "abusing" the Hammond, it "died" right there during the concert ! That poor Hammond took a lot of abuse from him over the years !! RIP KEITH NOEL EMERSON !!!!
My big sis took me to see these guys at the Swing Auditorium in San Bernardino in '77. It was my first rock concert ever. I was just seven years old, and perhaps the youngest ELP fan at the time. I loved every minute of it! I remember smelling something really aromatic in the stands, and I learned it was pot smoke! LOL. And I remember seeing Keith doing all kinds of crazy shit and knocking the Hammond on top of him and playing it backwards down while laying on his back. Good times. :)
I can appreciate the artistry and the desire to do something completely different - to lend a signature style to the way you play or to the stage theatrics. However, I repair these for a living, and I know this organ probably better than anyone alive today. That's a Hammond M100, and what's bad is that the keys on this organ are plastic, and weren't made to withstand a lot of stress the way the earlier full-size Hammonds were. I imagine that this guy kept their keyboard tech busy FULL TIME.
He used the dagger to sustain notes so he could go to do other things. It is not a violent act at all. It's true artistry. Keith pushed the limits of the Hammond. FYI: Lemmy from Motorhead gave him that dagger.
seeing them doing rondo in a similar way to the nice is good for me. I think elp never had that unspoken unity and feel of the nice, though good in places. I think it shows that a good performer and good music can sound great at any time. I remember seeing the nice in1968 with emerson doing the knife act. funny how no one calls jimi hendrix 'the keith emerson of the guitar'...
Brilliant! It's hard to rock out as a keyboard player, he found a way and made it his own and it's wonderful to watch, the pure physicality as well as the technical playing is amazing. Read his autobiography, he never touched drugs after a couple of bad experiences, adrenalin was enough. At the end of the day the organ is just a machine in abundance at the time, not treasured as they were now.
I saw them in concert about the time "from the beggining" came out; I have a memory of Keith strapped to the organ and it spinning around, plus all the other antics such as smashing the organ to get feedback. It was a great show, unfortunately not to be seen ever again! Prog Rock Rocks!
It's a Hammond A 100. He normally used this instrument as a part of his stage act. He also had a Hammond C-3. That's the one you see under his MOOG modular system keyboard.
It is actually a Hammond L-100. It's smaller than the A-100 and it's what he always used when he was jumping, twirling, plunging knives etc. The A-100 is much heavier and has two full manuals unlike the L series which had shorter, staggered manuals. The one under the Moog Modular is the B-3.
@magicmike618 I saw emerson doing this at the Usher Hall in Edinburgh in , I think 1971. It was hard to understand his motivations, and a lot of people questioned whether the organ was stil plugged into the mains ( i.e., energised) during this sequence, or whether it was a tape being played. It is almost of "spinal tap" proportions, a stunt like this.
That's a avantgarde classical music technique used in the sixties, and strumming the piano strings. Only Keith Emerson had the talent to play his music with such. Veriousity. He was also a rocker whose showmanship was as good as the best could do.i think emo was and remains the greatest keyboardist of our time. We were lucky he was here
This man is a goddamn fucking genius.... I'm a budding Hammond technician and would have loved and been honored to fix his L-100 after every show just for a chance to ween some of his playing wisdom....
I think I know why no-one does stuff like that today. Imaging breaking a Korg Oasys while trying to do something similar. The words MAJOR DEBT come to mind.
If you listen to other performances by ELP, you'd see that they CAN concentrate on music, too. And they do it phenomenally. They were actually classically trained. Besides, performances like this are more memorable than someone on stage lip syncing.
Think about this, he was good enough to play on his back, upside-down, with his instrument on top of his legs. Ride the thing like a mechanical bull. And stab blades between the keys. All while still delivering a consistent and streamlined array of notes. A true legend
Fools! This is how a true artist uses their instrument! It's just that, an INSTRUMENT. You don't worry about your hammers and screwdrivers getting bashed up do you? These things are meant to be played, used; how ever the user desires. Not to be put into some dust-free case and barely touched. I applaud Keith for his inventive style and technique.
Wow, alot of people have opinions about things they know nothing about, the 8 contact bars for the Hammond tonewheel organs are behind the keys.. theres nothing under the keybed nothing to break, no one flipped out when Keith Moon killed his drum kit on stage, it was a great moment in rock history.. besides, Hammonds are tanks, I love my M3, L100 and M100. Kieth Emerson is one of if not THE most Iconic rock synthists ever.
It was the 70’s - Leeds, I think - and I’d seen ELP before. I knew Keith Emerson would be leaping over his screaming Hammond at some point and I was ready with my newly acquired Praktica SLR. As he vaulted upwards and over I pressed the shutter release. Perfect, except I’d left the lens cover on. One of my life’s many ‘Oh f**k’ moments.
Anyone knows if Emerson had full-foldback spinets or non-modified ones? The sound is pretty good, and I don' t know how he avoided elecrical shock during his career.... .....Had he?!?
When he jumped on top of his hammond with the dagger between his teeth I thought I heard Heath Ledgers voice asking "Do you wanna know how I got these scars?"
so beyond awesome. The only place you can hear bands like this now is in some crusty hippy bar when you get really(extremely) lucky about the band playing that night
They usually did the organ freakout bit when they played the Nice tune Rondo. That's what they are doing in this vid. The Nice was Emerson's band before ELP.
People don't do THAT on stage anymore... I'm not saying modern rock is bad, there are still some worthy artists, but it certainly lost a whole chunk of its madness and danger, alas.
And third, don't you think showing off was hardly a problem for virtuosos? On the very opposite, it gives such energy (I know from own experience) that it actually unlocks something in musicians and makes them kind of "go for it".
Yeah, I totally agree. That goes double if it were a Mellotron or a Minimoog. But I have to say...I kinda dig it even though it is painful to watch! Now THAT'S showmanship!
Careful with that knife,Eugene
Ehehehe
Or izzit axe? Lol
careful with that knife, Keithene
i understood that reference
@@exceno7587 Blue Jay way
As a keyboardist myself, I can say that the knives and stuff don't damage the organ, I mean really it's all part of the showmanship of the song, which actually is pretty badass!
Yea he totally didn’t damage the organ at all, I agree
@@benjaminhall2496 I love that everything you read about these guys mentions about how sensitive hammonds were (looping tapes) and how much fucking around it was to set it up for a gig but only side mention what the f he used to do to them....
@@noinfo9130 It was the mellotron that had tape loops and was a pia to tour with. That said, Hammonds have a mechanical tone generator and tube electronics, so not really indestructible.
I think it's lame
@@anthonytucker8913i think that nobody cares
I saw the band on a Halloween show. Keith donned a mask while he attacked the organ. None of it was impulsive. He puts the knives in specific places to hold the keys down, so he can play other parts
and the throwing it around was the same again, not like the ol just plain 'lets smash this shit the fuck up' destruction of guitards and drums that started with people like The Who
I didn't know that Prog Rock can be SO Badass!!!
This and the flying piano are some of his best tricks
How the hell did he do that by the way?
@@manman-wg1xn I just saw that too. I read a comment that the piano was a prop with an electric piano inside that he could play. Not feasible for an actual piano to spin like that..
More like a flying piano SHELL. The action on a grand piano will NOT WORK upside down. I think it was a taped performance in this particular case.
i think it was purely visual, because acoustic grand cannot play upside down due to gravitation (the hammers would not strike the strings) . But certainly doable with electronic keyboards
One of the greatest keyboardists of all time, RIP Keith Emerson
Keith is just a wonderfully weird musician that I've come to love. A true artist to appreciate.
This is a sad day when one of your heroes die...Keith was an inspiration to so many keyboard players around the world for decades. The greatest player, performer and showman from the keyboard world that influenced and changed the way people play keyboards today.
He will be very missed! RIP Keith!
+Olexandr Ignatov Changed the way people play keyboards today? I´ve never seen one riding a keyboard
modern keyboards are made of plastic and too fragile to be abused like that :-(
man EL+P were long gone by the time i fell in love with 'Pirates' so they sure as shit sucked in multiple generations.
Never mind that Rondo is a Dave Brubeck tune and few rock keyboardists had the chops or talent learn and play it OR were well studied enough to even the song until Emerson played it. Sadly-all that gets shown is the non-musical aspect of Emerson's work; which is outstanding. He stood head and shoulders above EVERY keyboardist of his and each subsequent era of rock and roll.
Keith was the best keyboard player within the last 100 years full stop
Imagine if Keith Emerson was a church organist, then church attendances would go up.
Lemmy Kilmister
LOL! That's why he just WAS!
Emerson actually WAS a church organist before ELP and the Nice! All those heavy early ELP organ pieces, such as The Three Fates and Infinite Space, were directly inspired by Keith's church organ playing.
Lemmy, it was YOU who gave him a knives! so you are partly responsible for this crazy performance :-)))
a girl I was dating asked my to come and audition for the job of keyboard player (not the organ) at her church where she sang and her mom was choir director. After trying to play with the guitar player..i'm not that good playing with others...i got to fool around with the organ and played some of Light My Fire and Tocatta and Fugue in Dminor (the death song). I don't think her mom was happy about that. Our relationship didn't last long..I think I disappointed her that I wasn't a musician like she was.
meanwhile,the thing is probably still in perfectly functional order to this day...they require some maintenance but man, these things are over engineered and generally very difficult to kill
I know his organ tech.Emerson has DESTROYED uncountable numbers of Hammond Spinet Organs like the L-100
+James Vincent really? that's surprising to me...I've bashed my hammonds to hell and back...moved them 15 miles in the rain in the back of a pickup truck...you name it...still good to go
That is what Al Goff told me.He also wired Emersons Hammon to Midi controll the Moog.I trust his account to be accurate.
manifest Stupid false
anybody that remembers ELP in their prime knows they were dangerous sounding. There was something a bit frightening about them to me as a kid back in the early 70s, and I loved them. Anybody that ever doubts their awesomeness needs to check out the live album from 74 "Welcome back my friends to the show that never Ends" particularly the recording of Tarkus on there. That will settle any debate about their musicianship.
fun fact: the knives are a Hitlerjugent ceremonial knive Emerson got from Lemmy as gift for being his roady.
I have been reading Cider with roadies by Stuart Maconie. page 53. Footnote says ' I now know that they were not in fact carving knives but genuine Nazi daggers supplied by Emerson's one-time roadie. Lemmy.'
Yeah, they look special
The most famous and notorious Keith Emerson' stage act. Knives show, rodeo on the organ, playing on keyboard upside down. There's no other player like this
First of all, showing off is part of onstage presence - if you're constantly serious, no matter how good your music is and how good you are at it, people will get bored. Like it or not, but this is how it usually is. Definitely one of the things that make concert even more memorable.
Besides, it often actually works for the performance, enhancing it.
Bored? Have you ever been to a King Crimson concert or seen one?
@@KazBodnar
I haven't attended one, just seen.
It has to be said, my original comment is very old and I while I still stand by what I meant by it I should have chosen better words.
Basically, what I meant was don't just stand still there like a mummy. It's nice that you can play well, but what about some body language that shows you're having fun which transcribes to the audience? It's no fun just being there emotionless for 1-2 hours straight.
@@MoonchildMindaugas2 "Basically, what I meant was don't just stand still there like a mummy."
> Kraftwerk has entered chat
@@FernieCantoStill though, Kraftwerk’s image is about being robotically still and mechanical. To me, boring would be a skinny jeans indie band mumbling over a boring riff while moving less than a corpse
Farewell you wonderful madman.
Let's hope Keith didn't treat his women how he treated his organs.
He definitely didn't.
H4RDC0R3 P14Y3R It was a joke.
Bubbadoobop I understood. Just sayin, m8
Let's hope he didn't treat his organs like he treated his hammond organs
Omair Sheikh same
I saw a few guitars smashed at concerts in the early 70s but the one that got me was Keith Emerson rocking and stabbing his Hammond organ with knives.
this performance is sick af, RIP Keith Emerson, absolute madman, wizard on the keys, such sad news, you were a real inspiration...
Always love seeing this clip !!! IMHO, Keith Emerson was the greatest keyboardist ever.
Saw ELP three times. The second time I saw them, in1992, when he started "abusing"
the Hammond, it "died" right there during the concert ! That poor Hammond took a lot of abuse from him over the years !! RIP KEITH NOEL EMERSON !!!!
My big sis took me to see these guys at the Swing Auditorium in San Bernardino in '77. It was my first rock concert ever. I was just seven years old, and perhaps the youngest ELP fan at the time. I loved every minute of it! I remember smelling something really aromatic in the stands, and I learned it was pot smoke! LOL. And I remember seeing Keith doing all kinds of crazy shit and knocking the Hammond on top of him and playing it backwards down while laying on his back. Good times. :)
I can appreciate the artistry and the desire to do something completely different - to lend a signature style to the way you play or to the stage theatrics.
However, I repair these for a living, and I know this organ probably better than anyone alive today. That's a Hammond M100, and what's bad is that the keys on this organ are plastic, and weren't made to withstand a lot of stress the way the earlier full-size Hammonds were. I imagine that this guy kept their keyboard tech busy FULL TIME.
... you don't know it as well as I do... it's actually a L100. You'd not be able to lay down under an 'M' and have the strength to get it up again..!
Keith Emerson 1944-2016 :( RIP
how can he just move it around like that? they're HEAVY
RIP Just picked up a L133 circa '69 yesterday and listened to my Tarkus CD on the way home today then heard this news, spooky.
He used the dagger to sustain notes so he could go to do other things. It is not a violent act at all. It's true artistry. Keith pushed the limits of the Hammond.
FYI: Lemmy from Motorhead gave him that dagger.
seeing them doing rondo in a similar way to the nice is good for me. I think elp never had that unspoken unity and feel of the nice, though good in places. I think it shows that a good performer and good music can sound great at any time. I remember seeing the nice in1968 with emerson doing the knife act. funny how no one calls jimi hendrix 'the keith emerson of the guitar'...
puddypuss agreed, ELP never felt like a band, they always sounded like 3 dudes fighting for control. Never could groove.
Brilliant! It's hard to rock out as a keyboard player, he found a way and made it his own and it's wonderful to watch, the pure physicality as well as the technical playing is amazing. Read his autobiography, he never touched drugs after a couple of bad experiences, adrenalin was enough. At the end of the day the organ is just a machine in abundance at the time, not treasured as they were now.
The guy could really abuse his organ.
He actually did it, the absolute madman!
Great video I saw ELP in 71 and 73, brings back memories.
I saw them in concert about the time "from the beggining" came out; I have a memory of Keith strapped to the organ and it spinning around, plus all the other antics such as smashing the organ to get feedback. It was a great show, unfortunately not to be seen ever again! Prog Rock Rocks!
still remember that brussels concert in 1971. waauw! thanks Keith!!
But mom!! This *IS* music!!
When men were men and they used to knock around 200lb hammonds on stage, not these little 6lb guitars, lol.
I think this is a Wurlitzer Electrostatic Theatre Organ he's playing
Hammond L-100
It's a Hammond A 100. He normally used this instrument as a part of his stage act. He also had a Hammond C-3. That's the one you see under his MOOG modular system keyboard.
It is actually a Hammond L-100. It's smaller than the A-100 and it's what he always used when he was jumping, twirling, plunging knives etc. The A-100 is much heavier and has two full manuals unlike the L series which had shorter, staggered manuals. The one under the Moog Modular is the B-3.
Poor Greg Lake! :(
@magicmike618 I saw emerson doing this at the Usher Hall in Edinburgh in , I think 1971. It was hard to understand his motivations, and a lot of people questioned whether the organ was stil plugged into the mains ( i.e., energised) during this sequence, or whether it was a tape being played. It is almost of "spinal tap" proportions, a stunt like this.
Ahhh...for the good old days, great musicians who also had a sense of adventure!! That intensity is missing in today's musicians & recordings...
That's a avantgarde classical music technique used in the sixties, and strumming the piano strings. Only Keith Emerson had the talent to play his music with such. Veriousity. He was also a rocker whose showmanship was as good as the best could do.i think emo was and remains the greatest keyboardist of our time. We were lucky he was here
Imagine what Simon Cowell would have to say about it.......
hahahahaha
This man is a goddamn fucking genius.... I'm a budding Hammond technician and would have loved and been honored to fix his L-100 after every show just for a chance to ween some of his playing wisdom....
@harmonycostal its not to destroy the organ, its just the way he got the sounds that he used a lot.
He bought the organ. He can do whatever he wants. As for his musical prowess, it doesn't need defending. He is one of the titans of keyboards.
1:32 He was already hinting at what Toccata from Brain Salad Surgery would sound like!
I think I know why no-one does stuff like that today. Imaging breaking a Korg Oasys while trying to do something similar. The words MAJOR DEBT come to mind.
listen to the classical piece he composed, piano concerto number 1 and then say hes not a real musician
Thank you !! I have shared.
just amazing !!
If you listen to other performances by ELP, you'd see that they CAN concentrate on music, too. And they do it phenomenally. They were actually classically trained. Besides, performances like this are more memorable than someone on stage lip syncing.
Say it ain't so. Keith ROCKS ! Rest in Peace.
:(
This is as intense as Hendrix lighting his guitar on fire...
A mad genious. He knew what he was doing.
Think about this, he was good enough to play on his back, upside-down, with his instrument on top of his legs. Ride the thing like a mechanical bull. And stab blades between the keys. All while still delivering a consistent and streamlined array of notes. A true legend
Fools! This is how a true artist uses their instrument! It's just that, an INSTRUMENT. You don't worry about your hammers and screwdrivers getting bashed up do you? These things are meant to be played, used; how ever the user desires. Not to be put into some dust-free case and barely touched. I applaud Keith for his inventive style and technique.
Wow, alot of people have opinions about things they know nothing about, the 8 contact bars for the Hammond tonewheel organs are behind the keys.. theres nothing under the keybed nothing to break, no one flipped out when Keith Moon killed his drum kit on stage, it was a great moment in rock history.. besides, Hammonds are tanks, I love my M3, L100 and M100. Kieth Emerson is one of if not THE most Iconic rock synthists ever.
It was the 70’s - Leeds, I think - and I’d seen ELP before. I knew Keith Emerson would be leaping over his screaming Hammond at some point and I was ready with my newly acquired Praktica SLR. As he vaulted upwards and over I pressed the shutter release. Perfect, except I’d left the lens cover on. One of my life’s many ‘Oh f**k’ moments.
I think it would be dangerous to be backstage at an ELP gig, at least in the range where you could get stabbed by thrown knives!
I believe these might be the knives that Lemmy from Motorhead gave him; they were WW2 era German knives
How far can the ecstasy of creativity go?
Yes, just saw on TV a concert they did in 2010.
November 1971 Sheffield City Hall AWESOME
Damn Keith Moon exploding his drumkits... what a sucker he was...
Wrong Keith….. In all honesty, I love Keith Moon, but Keith Emerson had cooler things to do to the organ than Moon had for drumkits.
From what I’ve heard, that organ had it coming!
incredible organ noise! It's a wonder that nobody got hurt - CRAZY!
He literally feels the spring reverb
A True Legend. . Brilliant performer. . He,d be arrested today carrying knives!!!!
wow. the power of mind-altering substances.
using a prussian dagger for a key hold....next level.
From my opinion, Keith Emerson is the Jimi Hendrix of the keyboards
Anyone knows if Emerson had full-foldback spinets or non-modified ones? The sound is pretty good, and I don' t know how he avoided elecrical shock during his career.... .....Had he?!?
I am pretty certain that L100 took out a restraining order after this performance
Awesome!
This video makes me somehow heavily contemplate the meaning of life. This might just have been it. ROCK ON
this is how i practice on my hammond in the morning, and thats before i had glass dentures
Happy 67th birthday Keith !
Yee-haw!
I saw him do the same thing in around '96 or '97 in St. Louis.
When he jumped on top of his hammond with the dagger between his teeth I thought I heard Heath Ledgers voice asking "Do you wanna know how I got these scars?"
It's funny to see him teetering on top of that organ while holding a knife out.
One slip and we have a new an original end to a rock hero.
Of course there was, but it's called showmanship. Keith was and still is the King of Keyboards.
so beyond awesome. The only place you can hear bands like this now is in some crusty hippy bar when you get really(extremely) lucky about the band playing that night
This video always feels so dark
It's a tragedy when keith emerson is dead and dick cheney is still alive.
if he didn't chop up the Hammond to begin with it would have killed him, he would have been trapped until someone helped him back up
The Master!!!
What is it they say about bands that need a gimmik ?
@sabbath231 A roadie rebuilds it after every concert.
They usually did the organ freakout bit when they played the Nice tune Rondo. That's what they are doing in this vid. The Nice was Emerson's band before ELP.
People don't do THAT on stage anymore... I'm not saying modern rock is bad, there are still some worthy artists, but it certainly lost a whole chunk of its madness and danger, alas.
And third, don't you think showing off was hardly a problem for virtuosos? On the very opposite, it gives such energy (I know from own experience) that it actually unlocks something in musicians and makes them kind of "go for it".
Why did it catch on fire? don't know if it happened here but heard it did happen
keith emerson you are my hero ok
for some reason I find this hilarious what am I watching hahaha
Sound similar to deep purple doing mandrake route live .Has the same vibe to it
that is f**kin great!
Hi. Is there a big difference between the "R-100" and the "K-100", soundwise?
Thanks
Yeah, I totally agree. That goes double if it were a Mellotron or a Minimoog. But I have to say...I kinda dig it even though it is painful to watch! Now THAT'S showmanship!
legend.
what are they playing in the background? it sounds so familiar... maybe the same thing Deep Purple did at the end of Space Truckin'?
I witnessed that load of malarkey in the Cardiff Capitol in 1971 I think it was. What a waste of a quid or so the ticket cost.