No original members

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Gong update: the longest-serving member of the current line-up joined in 2007, and rejoined in 2012. The longest continually serving member joined in 2009.

mike t-diva, Monday, 27 December 2021 10:47 (two years ago) link

Tangerine Dream and Gong are both unusual in that the founder member of each gave their blessing / encouraged them to continue after they had died and both are also pretty good live entities despite having no original members. Steve Hillage also sometimes still plays with Gong.

stirmonster, Monday, 27 December 2021 11:41 (two years ago) link

Yes haven’t been mentioned on this thread yet; they haven’t had any permanent original members since Chris Squire died in 2015, although Tony Kaye did some guest live dates with them in 2018-19.

mike t-diva, Monday, 27 December 2021 14:27 (two years ago) link

Yes at least have members who played on their best-known albums, even if they weren't there from the start. Some of these others are more like official tribute acts.

they must have what you'd call some kind of 'arrangement' (Matt #2), Monday, 27 December 2021 14:33 (two years ago) link

yeah, there's a difference between having no original members and having nobody from the classic lineup. for example, some people decry Morbid Angel's current incarnation as being a sham. It's not because it only has one original member (that was the case by the time their first album came out). but because it only has one of the three members of the classic lineup of Vincent/Sandoval/Azagthoth.

hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Monday, 27 December 2021 14:46 (two years ago) link

one year passes...
seven months pass...

#onethread

After the group undertook a promotional tour to support the album Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus, Ferguson and Andes left the group, forming Jo Jo Gunne. California had accused them of plotting to take over the group. Their final gig with Spirit occurred on January 30, 1971, which almost ended with a fist-fight.

John Arliss initially took Andes' place. California was still in the lineup, but he had suffered a head injury from a horse riding accident and was unable to tour. Shortly thereafter, bassist and recent University of Texas School of Law graduate Al Staehely was recruited by Locke and Cassidy to replace Arliss. The trio toured briefly before deciding that they had to add a guitarist to do the music justice. Al's brother, John Christian (Chris) Staehely, auditioned for the band and was quickly brought on board, departing the Texas rock group Krackerjack.

The Staehelys, Cassidy and Locke recorded the 1972 album Feedback in Columbia/Epic's Hollywood studios. It was a different turn for the group, showing more of a country rock influence pervading their jazzier tendencies, but it only met with a mild commercial response, also reaching No. 63 in the charts. While the tour for Feedback proceeded very well for much of that year, Cassidy and Locke lacked an affinity for roots-based music and soon left the lineup. The Staehely brothers completed the critically successful tour with drummer Stu Perry before dissolving the group in mid-1973 and releasing their own album, Sta-Hay-Lee.

Imagine being stoked to see Spirit in 1973, and then getting pissed at the show because the bald guy wasn't on stage.


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