Showing posts with label Concert t-shirts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Concert t-shirts. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Quad Gods of Prog Rock (and some vintage concert shirts)

Any discussion regarding Progressive Rock (especially as an art form) is bound for disaster, particularly if you happen to be a musician, speaking of the subject with another musician. In such instances, it is better to have the conversation in a private setting, away from family and friends. It is also strongly recommended that both participants remain unarmed (as well as a considerable distance from any object that could conceivably be used as a weapon) and in general each participant should be respectively positioned at a distance of no less than five feet. In addition, such a topic can get pretentious, snooty, abstract and at times downright insulting. So why would I pick such a topic? Because everyone loves controversy. Well, that and the fact that there is some prog rock that I can handle and some that I just -- you get the idea.

Perh
aps the obvious first choice is Rush -- the Canadian trio that names songs after fictional literary characters. Rush didn't really start out as a progressive rock band, things just kind of fell together that way. The late seventies were strange times and perhaps prog rock was simply an extension of hard rock's violent recoil from the rising popularity of disco.

This shirt is an original from 1985's "Power Windows" tour. Granted, much of the 80's for Rush was defined by synthesizers as opposed to their guitar driven hard rock beginnings, but you can't really get mad at a band for evolving. People were genuinely upset by Bob Dylan's shift to electrified rock, moving away from the folky acoustic Woody Guthrie style social protest songs that had come to define his work. But in hindsight, such a move was absolutely wise because it not only showcases Dylan's versatility but has also made him more accessible to subsequent generations. Just about everyone knows who Bob Dylan is or at the very least has heard of him -- unless you happen to be a cop in New Jersey on a rainy day. To stay alive sharks constantly swim forward. Obviously, there are varying points of view on this -- and even though some folks truly want the same thing over and over again in terms of their entertainment consumption, you really should give a new album three listens (without distraction) and preferably with headphones before deleting it from your iPod playlist(s). If your initial opinion doesn't change by the third time around, put it away for a while and then give it another shot. Maybe it is my personal form of brainwashing, but I have come to love many albums using the "three listen" method -- which can also be applied to films, though in such cases headphones are optional.


This Jethro Tull concert shirt is actually from the band's folk rock era ("Bursting Out" tour 1978), but for the sake of continuity I shall remain on the prog rock topic. From 1972 - 1976 the band entered what many consider its progressive rock phase. I say "phase" because I don't totally agree with the notion that Jethro Tull is essentially a prog rock band. Like Rush, their beginnings are rooted in hard rock - a contained four year period of experimentation can hardly define the band's entire 40+ year career. This may, however, further prove my theory that progressive rock was indeed a violent recoil from disco.


Completely disregarding the early 1980's (COMPLETELY), Yes is one of my favorite prog rock bands. Yes started and will end as indispensable prog rock pioneers (again, completely disregarding the early 1980's).

Ironically, this raglan concert jersey is from the early 1980's, but it is currently the best Yes item in our store, so here it shall be presented. Totally embarrassed by the outright contradictions throughout my own carefully crafted blog post, I will move on to my favorite item.


This shirt is one of my absolute favorites, among the thousands of items we have had/sold in the past. It is original, from the "Works" tour in 1977 and utterly cool (pardon my regression to teenage parlance). The collective album cover art of "Brain Salad Surgery" (art work originally done by H. R. Gieger, who also did art design for the first Alien film), "Tarkus", and "Emmerson, Lake & Palmer" make this shirt both indespensible and more for the framing and hanging (and less for the wearing).

Emmerson, Lake & Palmer is probably the premier progressive rock band. Hands down, with no exception. Rush & Yes (completely disregarding the 1980's) fans may be upset and riled to the point of violence - and though I cannot honestly say who would win a bar room brawl amongst the three bands -- my comment still stands.

Two radio friendly singles "Lucky Man" & "From the Beginning" had 1970's record album consumers wondering why the music contained on the rest of ELP's albums sounded nothing like the singles. I guess it is kind of a mean surprise -- you think you are buying some sweet Alvin Lee's Ten Years After and actually get "Tubular Bells." But such is progressive rock.

On a side note, "From the Beginning" has a similar intro to "Roundabout" by Yes so that during call-in radio contests asking listeners to identify a song based on a short riff, the two are constantly confused.

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Monday, June 29, 2009

Shirt Du Jour: Crispy 80's Michael Jackson.

Funny story. Okay, maybe not so funny as ironic. Twisted and gut-wrenching also comes to mind, but I wouldn't be inclined to describe it as such. So let's stick funny - not ha ha - but STRANGE.

We had this shirt (yes, it sold already so quit emailing, you ambulance chasers!) for five years. It languished in our store begging to be bought and was browsed by over 3,000 people during its substantial shelf life. I kinda liked the thing, so I wasn't in a big hurry to sell it and in light of the traffic it was garnering, I didn't really entertain the offers that periodically appeared in my in-box. I generally maintained a congenial "thanks but no thanks" disposition, because again, I was in no hurry to sell it.

Let me pause here to add a brief editorial. Yes, this whole blog is basically an editorial so perhaps that is a bad choice of words. But in any event, get off my case and allow me to continue. I never imagined Michael Jackson would join the ranks of River Phoenix, Marilyn Monroe, Elvis & a host of others whose deaths have become pop phenomenons with the same sort of mysterious connotations and general mystique that surrounds say, the JFK Assassination. Not the conspiracy aspect of it, mind you, but the total strangeness of the whole thing. Put plainly, Michael Jackson wasn't on my list of famous people that might die soon. If asked on June 24th (or prior to noon on June 25th) I would have said he would be like James Brown or BB King (I know the King is not dead) - music legends that never really retired. But such is fate. Now, on with the story.

This shirt sold approximately 10 minutes after Michael Jackson's death was confirmed by various news sources. It seems funny (strange) that Jackson's passing provided added value to this product but in the general course of things, it is completely understandable. I'm sure Ed McMahon and Farrah Fawcet (who coincidentally passed on the same day as Michael Jackson - which might add to currently formulating conspiracy theories - stay tuned) merchandise has also seen a similar surge in demand. Makes you wish you saved at least one of those Publisher Clearing House envelopes, doesn't it?

I'm kind of sad because I am going to miss the shirt (and Michael Jackson) but I take comfort in the fact that the shirt has gone to a good home - the buyer's email address made it quite clear that they are a bigger Michael Jackson fan than I could ever be.





www.Thriftstore-Cowboy.com