LadyConstanze
Posts: 9722
Joined: 2/18/2005 Status: offline
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I was pretty gutted when I heard it yesterday, not that I knew him but interviewed him twice while I worked as a journalist and he was always one of the more "real" people in the music industry (his head was not up his own arse) with plenty of funny stories about his life, career, friends he played with. He had a real passion for music and despite the fact that he was a lot older than me, he really had a thing for modern music as well as blues and was so passionate about it. Such a lovely guy, after the last interview he said "Work is over for us now, shall we grab a bottle of wine, get rid of the minders form the record company and just talk about music? Know any good new bands I should give a listen to or buy the albums?" I was surprised that he wasn't given them for free and he said "I don't believe that I should be given stuff, other musicians need to live too and I don't want to take advantage!" You don't find that attitude often in musicians. Though the bottle turned into 3 or 4 and I think I was still on my first glass while he ordered the next bottle. When I made a comment about his capacity for drinking, he laughed and said "Irish and having toured most of my life, it helps. I don't do hard drugs, they killed Phil, I rather drink and do herbal stuff..." I recall picking up a Les Paul a bunch of years ago and looking at him and saying "That's quite battered and scratched..." he laughed and said "Don't drop it, she's my baby, Pete and I worked her pretty hard, it's my favorite guitar of all times. She wears her battle scars with pride, like me..." He sold it a year or two later, apparently got sick and couldn't play tour dates and had no insurance. Must have been really tough for him.
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There are 10 kinds of people who understand binary Those who do and those who don't! http://exdomme.blogspot.com/2012/07/public-service-announcement.html
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