Wednesday, September 17, 2008

John Mayall's Bluesbreakers V (Apr. 1965 - Aug. 1965) Guess Their Names


Comments:
John Mayall, John McVie, Hughie Flint and Eric Clapton
 
Mayall was like school for players. What a good job he did teaching all that came thru his curriculum.

My fav is STILL Turning Point, though. *G*
 
I see Martin correctly named all of them before the other contestants.

What does he win, Vanna?

I'm with ya, LaRoo--a must-have album for any student of music...
 
I'm still tryin to figger out who the hayall Hughie Flint was . . . ???????

Besides being the guy in the picture.
 
Here's a hint, he didn't play guitar. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/ab/Bluesbreakers_John_Mayall_with_Eric_Clapton.jpg

There's a picture of the album cover which you'll may have noticed isn't "Turning Point" which came out in '69.
 
Heh, Tub brokje the margins.

I can't EVEN find his linky . . . to Hughie . . .


And yes, that's my Norweigan spelling.

*G*

Nice pic, gotta admit . . . .

But really, Mayall?

"The Turning Point is a live album by John Mayall, featuring British blues music recorded at a concert at Bill Graham's Fillmore East on July 12, 1969."

No, I wasn't there . . . wish I had been.

Jon Mark (as good as Danny Kirwin or better on finger style git) and John Almond on reeds with Mayall made this sucker rock, roll, and jive in ways NO music has since.

Fess up . . . it's dawg given and chosen. It's a HUGE piece of history. You were somewhere in the sea's, or Oklahoma . . .

Don't blame me . . . *G* 707!

HAH!
 
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