For discussion of all aspects of the New York legends.
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Sheila Klein
- Head held high
- Posts: 705
- Joined: 15 Feb 2010 20:16
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by Sheila Klein » 20 Jul 2017 23:52
I'm writing on behalf of Ryan Walsh, who is writing a book on rock music in Boston in (or circa) 1968. He's asked me to ask the following of you'all:
I'm trying to track down a review of the VU live in Boston from sometime between 1967 and '69 that includes this line:
“An honest-to-goodness chick playing percussion ― do you believe it?”?
The info I'm after is publication name and date, and article title and author.
Many thanks for any possible help with this!
--Phil
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taxine
- Head held high
- Posts: 1202
- Joined: 27 Apr 2006 13:42
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by taxine » 21 Jul 2017 13:56
Sheila Klein wrote:I'm writing on behalf of Ryan Walsh, who is writing a book on rock music in Boston in (or circa) 1968. He's asked me to ask the following of you'all:
I'm trying to track down a review of the VU live in Boston from sometime between 1967 and '69 that includes this line:
“An honest-to-goodness chick playing percussion ― do you believe it?”?
The info I'm after is publication name and date, and article title and author.
Many thanks for any possible help with this!
--Phil
Such great proyect BTP performances deserve a look focussed at that time,looking forward to grab it... a BIG goal.That'd nice Moe&John were on board somehow.
Pretty cool title ...BTW
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But there are no stars in New York sky, they're all on the ground.
This is the place where she lay her head when she went to bed at night....
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iaredatsun
- Now jelly rolls in the street
- Posts: 1764
- Joined: 08 Jun 2004 21:38
- Location: London, Texas
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by iaredatsun » 25 Jul 2017 00:23
Sheila Klein wrote:I'm writing on behalf of Ryan Walsh, who is writing a book on rock music in Boston in (or circa) 1968. He's asked me to ask the following of you'all:
I'm trying to track down a review of the VU live in Boston from sometime between 1967 and '69 that includes this line:
“An honest-to-goodness chick playing percussion ― do you believe it?”?
The info I'm after is publication name and date, and article title and author.
Many thanks for any possible help with this!
--Phil
I thought I seen this come up in discussion before. And I also felt there another something to do with someone writing a book on the Boston live music scene before too. Feelings of Deja Vu, until I found this
Oct 1 1968. Steve Grant, The Tech
http://tech.mit.edu/archives/VOL_088/TE ... 1_P007.pdf
And here's the thread from 2005. (See post by Mark.) But I think the guy writing a book and asking for help has come up conversation before. I found this PDF in 3 minutes using the term REVIEW and BOSTON.
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viewtopic.php?f=1&t=501&p=3454&hilit=bo ... view#p3454
underground, overground
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iaredatsun
- Now jelly rolls in the street
- Posts: 1764
- Joined: 08 Jun 2004 21:38
- Location: London, Texas
Post
by iaredatsun » 25 Jul 2017 00:26
Sheila Klein wrote:I'm writing on behalf of Ryan Walsh, who is writing a book on rock music in Boston in (or circa) 1968. He's asked me to ask the following of you'all:
I'm trying to track down a review of the VU live in Boston from sometime between 1967 and '69 that includes this line:
“An honest-to-goodness chick playing percussion ― do you believe it?”?
The info I'm after is publication name and date, and article title and author.
Many thanks for any possible help with this!
--Phil
I thought I'd seen this come up in discussion before. And I also felt there another something to do with someone writing a book on the Boston live music scene asking questions before too. Feelings of déja vu, until I found this
Steve Grant, The Tech, p7. Oct 1 1968
http://tech.mit.edu/archives/VOL_088/TE ... 1_P007.pdf
And here's the thread from 2005. (See post by Mark.) But I think the guy writing a book and asking for help has come up conversation before.
I found this PDF link using the term REVIEW and BOSTON. Took three minutes
.
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=501&p=3454&hilit=bo ... view#p3454
underground, overground