JSngry Posted September 27, 2014 Report Posted September 27, 2014 I/m not letting this chair within 1500 feet of my propriety, forget about in my house, and should you decide to sit in it, wherever it ends up being, hey, you've been warned. Quote
Joe Posted September 28, 2014 Report Posted September 28, 2014 (edited) Psychodrama! And sort of the Maleficent to Roy Orbison's Sleeping Beauty. Edited September 28, 2014 by Joe Quote
xybert Posted September 28, 2014 Report Posted September 28, 2014 I alway felt that Canned Heat's Going Up Country was the creepiest... it just has this serial killer vibe about it. Has it ever been featured in a movie about a serial killer? These guys totally look and sound like they think that it would be 'groovy' to make a suit out of human skin: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QkEBykUlGU Quote
colinmce Posted September 28, 2014 Report Posted September 28, 2014 I alway felt that Canned Heat's Going Up Country was the creepiest... it just has this serial killer vibe about it. Has it ever been featured in a movie about a serial killer? These guys totally look and sound like they think that it would be 'groovy' to make a suit out of human skin: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QkEBykUlGU Ha!! Quote
Joe Posted September 28, 2014 Report Posted September 28, 2014 Never warmed (pun only begrudingly intended) to Canned Heat, but major respect to vocalist / flautist / harmonica player Bob Hite, a major collector and contributor to blues musicology. Billy Storm, now... the deeper you go into the discography, the more Lynchian (David) it gets... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gmfOCiCssH0 Quote
paul secor Posted September 28, 2014 Report Posted September 28, 2014 Never warmed (pun only begrudingly intended) to Canned Heat, but major respect to vocalist / flautist / harmonica player Bob Hite, a major collector and contributor to blues musicology. Billy Storm, now... the deeper you go into the discography, the more Lynchian (David) it gets... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gmfOCiCssH0 Alan Wilson was the harp player/flautist/vocalist. Both he and Bob Hite were blues collectors - I think that Hite was more so. Wilson probably would be considered more of a contributor to blues musicology. Quote
Joe Posted September 28, 2014 Report Posted September 28, 2014 I forgot about Al Wilson's role in the band. A sad loss; 1970 was a terrible year. http://www.dkulczyk.com/2012/05/30/bob-the-bear-hite-an-unstoppable-party-machine/ Quote
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