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Topic: Elton John Country Comfort |
Brendan Mitchell
From: Melbourne Australia
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Posted 14 May 2010 10:22 pm
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What a great song , I am guessing it would be Gordon Huntley on steel ? |
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Brad Bechtel
From: San Francisco, CA
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Alan Brookes
From: Brummy living in Southern California
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Posted 15 May 2010 9:50 am
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I've never heard it. |
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Charles Davidson
From: Phenix City Alabama, USA
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Posted 15 May 2010 10:30 am
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I like the version on Earl Scruggs and friends ,GREAT CD YOU BETCHA,DYK?BC. _________________ Hard headed, opinionated old geezer. BAMA CHARLIE. GOD BLESS AMERICA. ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVIST. SUPPORT LIVE MUSIC ! |
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Brendan Mitchell
From: Melbourne Australia
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Lee Baucum
From: McAllen, Texas (Extreme South) The Final Frontier
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Posted 15 May 2010 7:33 pm
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Thanks, Brendan! That brings back great memories. |
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John Roche
From: England
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Mike Poholsky
From: Kansas, USA
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Posted 16 May 2010 5:55 am
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Great steel solo! Another instance where a solo is not complicated, but fits the song perfectly. Performed flawlessly.
That whole record is a masterpiece, music & lyrics. One of my top 5 records of all time. Before Elton went totally pop. _________________ Zumsteel 12 Universal
SGBB
ShoBud VP
'64 Fender Twin Reverb/Fox Rehab
Fender Steel King w/BW 1501-4
FX to Taste |
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John Billings
From: Ohio, USA
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Posted 16 May 2010 6:48 am
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Didn't Rod Stewart also do this song? |
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Olli Haavisto
From: Jarvenpaa,Finland
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Posted 16 May 2010 7:04 am
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Mike Poholsky wrote: |
Great steel solo! Another instance where a solo is not complicated, but fits the song perfectly. Performed flawlessly.
That whole record is a masterpiece, music & lyrics. One of my top 5 records of all time. Before Elton went totally pop. |
So true. I only recently bought the pre-giant-glitter-glasses and feathers-period albums.
Tumbleweed Connection, Madman across the Water, Honky Cat, my first EJ records...
Perfectly crafted pop music... _________________ Olli Haavisto
Finland
Last edited by Olli Haavisto on 16 May 2010 10:32 am; edited 1 time in total |
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Alan Brookes
From: Brummy living in Southern California
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Posted 16 May 2010 10:27 am
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Thanks Brendan. It reminds me of "You Can't Hide Your Lying Eyes".
Nice steel solo. I can't make up my mind about Elton John. He has some great songs, but when I've listened to his LPs there's a lot of mediocre stuff in between. |
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John Billings
From: Ohio, USA
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Alan Brookes
From: Brummy living in Southern California
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Posted 16 May 2010 10:36 am
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I left YouTube playing after the song completed and it went on to play "Your Song", which to my mind is a much better composition and cries out for a steel guitar. In fact, 90% of Elton John's numbers would benefit from a steel guitar, and probably a fiddle. ![Cool](images/smiles/icon_cool.gif) |
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Mike Poholsky
From: Kansas, USA
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Posted 16 May 2010 10:40 am
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Alan, I understand what you're saying. Get ahold of the "Tumbleweed Connection" CD. The whole thing is a great piece of work. IMHO. _________________ Zumsteel 12 Universal
SGBB
ShoBud VP
'64 Fender Twin Reverb/Fox Rehab
Fender Steel King w/BW 1501-4
FX to Taste |
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Godfrey Arthur
From: 3rd Rock
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Posted 3 Dec 2014 9:18 pm
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Country Comfort
Available on the album Tumbleweed Connection
Music: Elton John
Lyrics: Bernie Taupin
Piano and vocals: Elton John
Acoustic guitar: Caleb Quaye
Acoustic 12 string guitar: Les Thatcher
Steel guitar: Gordon Huntley
Violin: Johnny Van Derek
Bass guitar: Herbie Flowers
Drums: Barry Morgan
Harmonica: Ian Duck
Backing vocals: Dee Murray, Nigel Olsson _________________ ShoBud The Pro 1
YES it's my REAL NAME!
Ezekiel 33:7 |
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Jerry Van Hoose
From: Wears Valley, Tennessee
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Posted 4 Dec 2014 3:35 am
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Brendan, thanks for mentioning this song by Elton John as well as providing the "easy link". It was a favorite of mine, brings back great memories. _________________ GFI w/Steeltronics 507, Profex II, Nashville 112’s, Hilton, George L .155’s, BJS, Steelers Choice |
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Mark van Allen
From: Watkinsville, Ga. USA
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Brint Hannay
From: Maryland, USA
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Posted 4 Dec 2014 9:40 am
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Juice Newton did a good version. Dan Dugmore, Jaydee Maness, and Doug Livingston (a/k/a Earnest Bovine) are credited for steel on the album. |
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Joachim Kettner
From: Germany
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chris ivey
From: california (deceased)
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Posted 28 Sep 2015 4:41 pm
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never cared for elton.
and that solo is ok but nothing to rave about tonewise or in confidence of delivery.
steel has come a long way since then in tone and execution. |
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Les Cargill
From: Oklahoma City, Ok, USA
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Posted 28 Sep 2015 5:29 pm
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chris ivey wrote: |
never cared for elton.
and that solo is ok but nothing to rave about tonewise or in confidence of delivery.
steel has come a long way since then in tone and execution. |
I literally grew up on that stuff - that was my practice material for piano lessons for a couple of years.
Love/hate Elton, the Elton John Band was a great place to learn how. Dee Murray was the best bass teacher I ever had. And in most cases with Gordon on an Elton song, Gordon played sparingly - there was usually 35 pounds of tracks in a five pound bag on those records. It's on the record for the A/B pedal stuff. His producer (Gus Dudgeon) loved all that distortion on everything, or maybe people's ears were a little "anesthesized." Meh, for "Tumbleweed" it was probably just a poor recorder.
I always liked that song for the Englishisms in the lyrics - "the herdsman with his torch" in the middle of a Nashville sounding pseudo country song Tumbleweed's kind of one of those records, at least for me. Weird little songs. |
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Damir Besic
From: Nashville,TN.
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Posted 28 Sep 2015 10:25 pm
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chris ivey wrote: |
never cared for elton.
and that solo is ok but nothing to rave about tonewise or in confidence of delivery.
steel has come a long way since then in tone and execution. |
what steel? ![Cool](images/smiles/icon_cool.gif) _________________ www.steelguitarsonline.com |
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Bill Sinclair
From: Waynesboro, PA, USA
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Posted 29 Sep 2015 6:32 am
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[quote="Les Cargill
I always liked that song for the Englishisms in the lyrics - "the herdsman with his torch" in the middle of a Nashville sounding pseudo country song Tumbleweed's kind of one of those records, at least for me. Weird little songs.[/quote]
Re:Tumbleweed Connection I always felt like Elton John and Bernie Taupin must have listened to "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" and decided to make a whole album of that stuff.* Turned out to be an interesting English take on the American frontier sort of concept album. Weird little songs or not, I don't think there's a clunker in the bunch. "Come Down In Time" stills breaks my heart.
*Please note: These are my personal internet musings and have no factual basis! (Before I start a rumor). |
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Chris Walke
From: St Charles, IL
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Posted 30 Sep 2015 9:16 am
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Bill Sinclair wrote: |
[quote="Les Cargill
I always liked that song for the Englishisms in the lyrics - "the herdsman with his torch" in the middle of a Nashville sounding pseudo country song Tumbleweed's kind of one of those records, at least for me. Weird little songs. |
Re:Tumbleweed Connection I always felt like Elton John and Bernie Taupin must have listened to "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" and decided to make a whole album of that stuff.* Turned out to be an interesting English take on the American frontier sort of concept album. Weird little songs or not, I don't think there's a clunker in the bunch. "Come Down In Time" stills breaks my heart.
*Please note: These are my personal internet musings and have no factual basis! (Before I start a rumor).[/quote]
I agree on Elton/Bernie referencing the Band with this album. Lead off track (Well-Known Gun) is absolutely killer, great plodding groove, much like the Band's Up On Cripple Creek. Just the way that song moves from the intro into the first verse makes the entire album worthwhile, in my opinion. |
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