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Doug on Demand - Ep. 10

Hey y'all! I'm pleased to share the latest episode of Doug on Demand. This is the zoom recording from our live session yesterday. Remember, attendees for these sessions are members of our Council of Dougs and Doug's Angels tiers. I hope you'll consider joining us!

The Move - Message from the Country

Don Caballero - In the Absence of Strong Evidence to the Contrary, One May Step Out of the Way of the Charging Bull, from What Burns Never Returns

Terry Reid - Seed of Memory

Mark Kelly's Marathon - Amelia

Phil Manzanera - Tomorrow Never Knows

Dan Hicks and his Hot Licks – I Feel Like Singing

Eurythmics - When the Day Goes Down

Frumpy - Take Care of Illusion

Neil Young - Crime in the City

Agents of Mercy - The Black Forest

Jeff Beck & Jan Hammer - Darkness / Earth in Search of a Sun (Live)

Doug on Demand - Ep. 10

Comments

Neil Young is a great artist and this was a great song from him. "Freedom" and "On The Beach" are my favourite albums by him, I also really love the live release combination "Arc / Weld". Very powerful playing on that album.

Tim van der Leeuw

Glad to see Frumpy, one of Germany's great progressive bands with Inga Rumpf (Germany's Janis Joplin) and Jan Jacques Krevitz. Several members of this group became Atlantis and were eventually recruited to play with Eric Burdon when he relocated to Germany in the late 70's to early 80's.

Guitar Channel

I've never heard of Don Caballero before either, but I LOVED that track! Maybe one of these sessions I'll pick a track by Giraffes? Giraffes! I'm a sucker for this math rock sort of thing.

Mark J Moerman

Yes! At the time they made the Message From The Country album and its attendant singles (including the original Do Ya and California Man), they were simultaneously making the first ELO album. 10538 Overture, the first ELO single, was originally going to be a Move B-side, but when Roy added the cello parts, they realized that this was the ELO sound they'd been working toward.

Mark J Moerman

Yes, although the crossover was messy. The main Move members that became ELO were Roy Wood, Jeff Lynne, and Bev Bevan (drums). Jeff Lynne had only joined the Move on the understanding that it would become the ELO sound, and Roy Wood left after the first ELO album. However, ELO was Roy Wood's idea, and he was the undoubted driving force of the Move, so it's fair to say that this was an evolution of the same band.

Adie

The Move... did they become ELO?

Robert Thornton

Cool! Time to go listen to those first few songs...including mine! Of all times to doze off in front of the TV.

Mark J Moerman


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