[Heeplist] Byron era and the others

Igor Shveitser zlenko_iv at mail.ru
Mon Mar 9 21:50:20 EDT 2015


 Hi Grace,
Thank you for the detailed answer. I also think there is magic in what the band did during their early days. Actually, for me the last traces of magic might be noticed in the LP of 1980, after that the band's energy became different. It might sound funny, but the more I learned about that Heep on stage, the more I should turn away from them due to multiple mistakes and sometimes not that magical behaviour at all! If you don't get my point, listen to Heep live in San Diego, all that stuff about the girl and sweet, sweet... freedom :))) However, even when brutal or clumsy with their respective parts or as a band in its entirety, those guys were very authentic and funny. I also love all Heep, but tend to say that the albums since 1982 I rather like more or less while all of the earlier material I literally love with all my heart. Even without Byron there still was some kind of nerve, some touch of spontaniety and genuine inspiration that is missing in Mick's version of the band. However, I like some of his songs too, especially the likes of Too Scared To Run, Sell Your Soul, Bad Blood, Lost One Love, Playing For Time and On The Other Side Of Midnight - to me they prove how great Mick's band can be when they don't try to imitate that magical approach and show their true colours. In order to deliver it in a more poetical way, I prefer them to hit the nail right on the head than to make love in silence. :)))))
All the best, Igor

Понедельник, 09 марта 2015, 23:17 UTC от Grace Clarke <bolan77 at rocketmail.com>:
>Hi Igor,
>
>I think the Byron era just has that magical vibe. I'm a big Bolan fan too and I'm not sure if you know, but Marc Bolan is an incredible poet of a magical language. I think the Byron era sort of brings that magical atmosphere into classic rock music. Well written songs. Completely unique to any other band. David's charisma comes through in his vocals too. Really enjoyable to hear. Then the more ballad like songs bring tears to my eyes. It's a genuine feel. Very raw and rough round the edges but perfected to the max at the same time. If that's even possible.. Well it is with Heep! I love the Magician's Birthday and Demons & Wizards albums. Beautiful album art too by Roger Dean (one of my favourite surrealists) which seems to connect so well with the music itself. I love all Heep but there's something very special about these early albums. It's hard to explain how music makes me feel but I hope you get my drift with this one.
>
>Thanks,
>Grace.
>
>Sent from my iPhone
>
>> On 9 Mar 2015, at 22:55, Igor Shveitser < zlenko_iv at mail.ru > wrote:
>> 
>> Grace,
>> It would be nice to learn why the Byron era seems preferable to you.
>> Cheers, Igor
>> 
>> 
>> -- 
>> Igor Shveytser
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