|
|
Artist & Band information for:cn-Sunshine Rock 3 Quicksilver Messenger Service
|
| | |
The John Cipollina Homepage
Information about the late guitarist, a founding member of Quicksilver Messenger Service.
http://www.johncipollina.com/ |
Shady Grove - The Quicksilver Messenger Service Page
Official site with information about the history of and current incarnation of the band.
http://www.penncen.com/quicksilver/ |
Wharfrat99's Concert Photos
Recent concert photos of Gary Duncan's Quicksilver and upcoming concert information for the group.
http://www.geocities.com/wharfrat99/wharfrat99qmsindex.html |
Amazon offers
Shady Grove (Audio CD),30 July, 1992
List price $9.98
Nicky Hopkins tries to jump start QMS, with a limited degree of success / 3
For years, decades actually, I could not name another song by Quicksilver Messenger Service other than the title track from this 1969 album, which was the group's third release. I really like the song, or I should say that I really liked the introduction to the song, with the pounding piano and the guitar of John Cipollina slowly winding up to the basic theme of the song. The song itself is okay (if it was a bit better I might have decided to have picked up the album before the decade ran out), but the introduction is absolutely great. Now that I have checked out the album I am slapping my head over not recognizing the keyboard stylings of Nicky Hopkins on the piano. But then you say the name Nicky Hopkins and you think of him playing sessions with the Rolling Stones for albums like "Their Satanic Majesties Request" and "Let It Bleed." But he also worked with the Beatles on "The White Album," as well as the Kinks, the Who, and the Jefferson Airplane. That last one probably explains why he ended up with a psychedelic group out of San Francisco.
The other thing I was surprised to learn several years back was that "Shady Grove" is not an original composition but an Appalachian folk song. The Kingston Trio did a really nice medley of it with "Lonesome Traveler," and if you want something more authentic you can go track down Doc Watson doing the purest bluegrass version I have come across to date. Despite the frenzied piano playing that sets up the song, when Quicksilver Messenger Service does it they sure sound to me like they are channeling Bo Diddley more than Doc Watson. Still, when I was putting together my own set of folk music CDs and I started putting together one devoted to folk rock, this had to be the opening track (followed by Led Zeppelin's "Gallows Pole"). On balance this is still just a near-great song, and the bad news is that the rest of the album is as inconsistent as the opening track.
From what I have heard of the first two QMS albums, and as I can see just by looking at their play lists, the group was more into jamming than anything else (each album has a track in double-digits in length, "The Fool" and "Calvary" respectively). Adding Hopkins into the mix certainly changed the group's direction and sound, although the subtraction of guitarist Gary Duncan probably played a key role as well. Ironically the longest track on the album comes courtesy of Hopkins. "Edward, the Mad Shirt Grinder," which slows down the album to almost a dead stop at one point on the last track after offering some decent instrumental moments. "The Flute Song" quickly reminds you that is a psychedelic group and if you play this album for somebody who has never heard it they will probably ask you what group is doing the second song in this collection of forgotten late Sixties music.
Time and time again Hopkins's piano playing stands out despite the best efforts of the rest of the band to drown him out at times. It is the best part of the rollicking' "Three or Four Feet From Home," the pretentious sounding "Too Far," and "Word's Can't Say," the last one being a reminder that QMS was not only hung up on western cowboy images for the covers of their albums, but tried to move musically in that direction without noticeably success. "Joseph's Coat" is a blue song that badly needs to be remixed (and a rewrite of the lyrics would be in order as well), and "Flashing Lonesome" is another forgettable trippy little tune. Then there is "Holy Moly," which should have been the last track on the album, because there is nothing to say after that one. If you are an absolute hard core devote of psychedelic music then you might find another track of interest besides "Shady Grove," but now that I have actually heard this album I am right back where I started.
Song "Freeway Flyer"
I'm a freeway flyer and I'm down on the floor,
I keep on gettin' high, wonderin' how high can one man go?
Well, I'm a dangerous stranger, I'm a psychedelic ranger,
Now there's no place that I can't go, no no no, baby, no no no.
I'm a freeway wrestler, I keep it to the floor,
I'm an old poor guitar hassler, and I can always get my way back home anywhere,
Well, I'm a six-string rangler, I'm a traffic strangler,
And now there's no place that I can't go, no no no, babe, no no no.
I'm a little girl pleaser, I always get my way,
I'm an old sweet thing teaser, I'm gonna die and go to Hell some day,
Well, I'm a meat grinder, sweet spot foot ___ roll in the ___ cash.
|
Solid Silver - Quicksilver Messenger Service : Read reviews and ...
Read reviews and compare prices for Solid Silver - Quicksilver Messenger Service.
http://cd.ciao.co.uk/Solid_Silver_Quicksilver_Messenger_Service__5986062
|
Quicksilver Messenger Service : Quicksilver - Listen, Review and ...
Quicksilver reviews and sound clips on the ARTISTdirect Network.
http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/store/artist/album/0,,150367,00.html
|
Amazon.com: Quicksilver Messenger Service: Music
Quicksilver Messenger Service, Quicksilver Messenger Service. ... This album does
not get better reviews because it was pretty much a straight ahead ...
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B000002UTX?v=glance
|
| | |
|
Yahoo! News Search Results for band "Quicksilver Messenger Service"
Art: Bad Trip (Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune)
Pictures of boys with guitars are almost as predictably dull as snapshots of men with fish. And the poses are pretty much the same. A guy clutching a fish almost always employs the vertical dangle or the horizontal grip-and-grin. Ditto with guitars. And so it is with "San Francisco Psychedelic," a display of 58 photos of 1960s rock musicians at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts through June 10. ...
Moonlight Drive to perform at Goodstock (The Wichita Eagle)
The Doors didn't play at Woodstock in 1969 but that didn't stop the founders of Goodstock 2007 from asking Moonlight Drive, a Doors tribute band from Wichita, to perform at the festival in July.
Keith Killgo Jazz Pioneer Performs at SXSW 2007, Saturday, March 17 at the El...
?This is to confirm my high and enthusiastic regard for the drumming exploits of Mr. Keith Killgo, who is one of the most exciting, intelligent and dynamic swing-miesters in our profession. Any venue or concert in which he plays will be better for it.?
|