ChatterBank1 min ago
Roy Buchanan
Who remembers Roy Buchanan ?
Another hero from my youth that died far too young...only 51 !
By his own hand, if Wiki is to be trusted.
Another hero from my youth that died far too young...only 51 !
By his own hand, if Wiki is to be trusted.
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I remember having an album or two of his many years ago (early 70s). I wonder what happened to them.
I seem to remember he was a lot like Eric Clapton when he began to release his solo albums, lots of slow bluesy ballads.
As you get older (I am now 66) you find the people you liked in the 1960s and 70s are all dead or dying off (sorry to get morbid).
Saw "Great Guitar riffs" on BBC4 last night and they had the Jimi Hendrix Experience in it and I found it sad to think all three of them are dead.
Is that the only group where all the members are dead?
I remember having an album or two of his many years ago (early 70s). I wonder what happened to them.
I seem to remember he was a lot like Eric Clapton when he began to release his solo albums, lots of slow bluesy ballads.
As you get older (I am now 66) you find the people you liked in the 1960s and 70s are all dead or dying off (sorry to get morbid).
Saw "Great Guitar riffs" on BBC4 last night and they had the Jimi Hendrix Experience in it and I found it sad to think all three of them are dead.
Is that the only group where all the members are dead?
I saw Roy Buchanan live in the early 80's in London, and went back stage to interview him, but he was too drunk to make any sense!
I interviewed him by phone a couple of weeks after, sober, and he was charming, and another guitar magazine contacted me and bought my interview, so it was a profitable conversation.
I was a massive fan, his music sends me straight back to 1977/78, one of the most intense and happy times of my life, when his first two albums were a permanent soundtrack.
I remember commiserating with Teddy Slatus (Filthy Teddy) about his sad and sudden loss, a great musician, and a flawed troubled man.
I interviewed him by phone a couple of weeks after, sober, and he was charming, and another guitar magazine contacted me and bought my interview, so it was a profitable conversation.
I was a massive fan, his music sends me straight back to 1977/78, one of the most intense and happy times of my life, when his first two albums were a permanent soundtrack.
I remember commiserating with Teddy Slatus (Filthy Teddy) about his sad and sudden loss, a great musician, and a flawed troubled man.
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