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Sean Trane View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 22 2005 at 04:07

The first two albums are the more essential ones and they have superb Roger Dean designed artwork sleeves. But the rest of the alkbums are all worth a listen.

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 22 2005 at 12:49
Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

The first two albums are the more essential ones and they have superb Roger Dean designed artwork sleeves. But the rest of the alkbums are all worth a listen.

 



I agree the first two albums are both outstanding and probably the best of their overall discography.  However, I too find myself enjoying every Nucleus album I have listened to.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 23 2005 at 04:07

Well it loks like Ron (Proglucky) added a few more Nucleus albums. I've got homeworks to do for the WE so I can review them next week!

 

 

Thanks Ron!

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 23 2005 at 12:36
FYI to all Nucleus Fans, Ian Carr is a contributor to The Rough Guide to Jazz (ed. 3). I have an earlier edition and it's wonderful.

      
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 23 2005 at 13:06

Originally posted by DEzerov DEzerov wrote:

FYI to all Nucleus Fans, Ian Carr is a contributor to The Rough Guide to Jazz (ed. 3). I have an earlier edition and it's wonderful.

      

Ian Carr writes and is published a lot nowadays - he provided the jazz pages/editorial to the BBC Radio 3 Music magazine for many years. He wrote a definitive Miles Davis biography, where you get a better idea  by what Mr Davis meant when he used the term m*th*rf****r extensively within his own autobiography, (i.e. whether Davis was being derogatory or heaping praise). And a favourite source of info: Jazz: The Essential Companion by Ian Carr, Brian Priestley, Digby Fairweather, which is a who's who of jazz at about 1990. Most of the jazzmen/women alive at the time listed there, wrote their own biographies. However, a missed opportunity(and IMHO a serious omission):  while Soft Machine is regularly referred to in a number of mini-biogs and in the index of the book, these pundits deemed the band was not worthy of a separate entry.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2005 at 18:12
So far, I really dig everything I've heard from Nucleus.

I, too, discovered them through the Soft Machine connection. Being a big fan of Soft Machine, Mahavishnu, Miles Davis and the like, my ears and brain like what Nucleus was laying down.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 25 2005 at 18:36
Originally posted by peskypesky peskypesky wrote:

So far, I really dig everything I've heard from Nucleus.

I, too, discovered them through the Soft Machine connection. Being a big fan of Soft Machine, Mahavishnu, Miles Davis and the like, my ears and brain like what Nucleus was laying down.


What albums have you heard?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 26 2006 at 23:28
This was a good thread.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2006 at 04:34

an excellent one

I am still having trouble to find a copy of Alleycats except for the double BGO release where it is coupled with Direct Hits (this sounds like a best of album , but coming off Nucleus, it would be surprising

What can you tell me about Direct Hits ?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2006 at 04:41

Well, I've got hold of Elastic Rock since the thread enjoyed its first run ... so far it's enjoyable, but not necessarily mind-blowing ... I do enjoy the feel of it compared to Soft Machine's Fourth & Fifth (which are two latest Soft Machine albums I've heard) ...

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2006 at 04:48
Originally posted by Trotsky Trotsky wrote:

Well, I've got hold of Elastic Rock since the thread enjoyed its first run ... so far it's enjoyable, but not necessarily mind-blowing ... I do enjoy the feel of it compared to Soft Machine's Fourth & Fifth (which are two latest Soft Machine albums I've heard) ...

 

The thing about 4 and 5, is that they are very cold in feeling musically

Try out Nucleus's second album We'll talk about it later which is stupendous

Chris Spedding (yes, mr Mortorcycle mama of punk fame in 77) is absolutely brilliant on that album

Spedding also made a very rare album called Songs Without Words which is phenominally good jazz rock and not far away from Nucleus, but still quite different.

let's just stay above the moral melee
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keep our sand-castle virtues
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as well as a thinker,
prefer lifting our pen
rather than un-sheath our sword
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2006 at 04:55
Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

Originally posted by Trotsky Trotsky wrote:

Well, I've got hold of Elastic Rock since the thread enjoyed its first run ... so far it's enjoyable, but not necessarily mind-blowing ... I do enjoy the feel of it compared to Soft Machine's Fourth & Fifth (which are two latest Soft Machine albums I've heard) ...

 

The thing about 4 and 5, is that they are very cold in feeling musically

Try out Nucleus's second album We'll talk about it later which is stupendous

Chris Spedding (yes, mr Mortorcycle mama of punk fame in 77) is absolutely brilliant on that album

Spedding also made a very rare album called Songs Without Words which is phenominally good jazz rock and not far away from Nucleus, but still quite different.

One day, then!

Right now my most played early 70s jazz-rock album is actually Back Door's self-titled one ...

"Death to Utopia! Death to faith! Death to love! Death to hope?" thunders the 20th century. "Surrender, you pathetic dreamer.”

"No" replies the unhumbled optimist "You are only the present."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2006 at 07:28

Originally posted by Jimbo Jimbo wrote:

I was thinking about getting Live In Bremen next. Is it any good?

Smokin'.  Buy it immediately.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2006 at 07:37
Originally posted by nobody nobody wrote:

Originally posted by Jimbo Jimbo wrote:

I was thinking about getting Live In Bremen next. Is it any good?

Smokin'.  Buy it immediately.


Yeah, I probably should. It's been six months, and I still haven't bought it ...
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2006 at 13:32

I have "Elastic Rock"/"We'll Talk About It Later" on one CD, "Solar Plexus", "Belladonna", "Under The Sun"/"Snakehips Etcetera" on one CD and "In Flagrante Delicto" (one of their best).

Excellent jazz-rock/fusion band!!!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2006 at 19:06
Probably one of the greatest jazz/rock bands from the UK. They were genious, as many jazz British musicians, in fact.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2006 at 22:56
Originally posted by Sean Trane Sean Trane wrote:

an excellent one

I am still having trouble to find a copy of Alleycats except for the double BGO release where it is coupled with Direct Hits (this sounds like a best of album , but coming off Nucleus, it would be surprising

What can you tell me about Direct Hits ?



Yeah, Direct Hits is definitely a compilation, but I haven't heard it myself.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2008 at 17:48
Well,
I am hooked now.
Bought the 2on1 Elastic/We'll talk +Under the sun/Snakehips.
They are all great. Am listening to them in my 5 cd shuffle all the time so I don't really know what is from where,but I don't care.
Ordered Solar/Belladonna + Labyrint/Roots and can't wait.
I love Soft Machine Bundles and 7 which I find somewhat similar.
 
Any other suggestions of bands that fits into this mold.?
 
I got 4 Peregios that I love totally.Fits nicely,without horns though.
 
Big%20smile
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2008 at 18:10
Apart from Nucleus Live - recorded at my alma mater Loughborough University, when I was on their ENT Committee - suggest you check out Mike Westbrook's early 70's recordings,which jazz critic Stuart Nicholson reckons were the best jazz rock fusion recorded in the UK at that time, e.g. Solid Gold Cadillac, (available as a twoforoneCD with Brain Damage) and Citadel/Room315 - all albums also released on BGO Records.

Edited by Dick Heath - June 26 2008 at 11:57
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2008 at 11:36
Originally posted by Dick Heath Dick Heath wrote:

Apart from Nucleus Live - recorded at my almamater Loughborough University, when I was on their ENT Committee, suggest you check out Mike Westbrook's early 70's recordings,with critic Stuart Nicholson reckons were the best jazz rock fusion recorded in the UK at that time,. e.g. Solid Gold Cadillac, (available as a twoforoneCD with Brain Damage) and Citadel/Room315 - all albums also released on BGO Records).
 
Thanx a bunch.
Will go searchin'.
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