L
Lewguitar
Guest
Re: Page/Clapton/Beck....and Peter Green?
I saw John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers at the Grande Ballroom in the lates 60's and went expecting to see Peter Green playing with the band. (I am a big Peter Green fan, BTW...when I said I was more impressed with Clapton and Beck I didn't mean to imply that I didn't love Green too!) Anyways, Mick Taylor was the guitarist in Mayall's by then...not Peter Green. And Mick was awesome! I love his version of the Freddie King classic Driving Sideways. He had a 50's sunburst Les Paul and either a tweed 3x10 Fender Bandmaster or a 4 x 10 tweed Bassman. And I swear: it sounded like a 50 watt Marshall. Right after that I went searching for (and found!
) my first tweed Bassman. It had been recovered in orange naugahyde but it only cost $125. and it had all four of the original Jensen 10's too! It's funny to think about it now, 35 years later, but those sunburst Les Pauls and '59 Bassman amps were less than 10 years old back then. Lew
Simon_F said:I would certainly rank Peter Green up there with Page, Clapton and Beck.
Let's not forget Paul Kossoff, Mick Taylor, Brian Jones and Keith Richards either! Those guys were as much a part of Britain's 60s blues boom as the Yardbirds triumvirate.
God bless the Surrey Delta.![]()
I saw John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers at the Grande Ballroom in the lates 60's and went expecting to see Peter Green playing with the band. (I am a big Peter Green fan, BTW...when I said I was more impressed with Clapton and Beck I didn't mean to imply that I didn't love Green too!) Anyways, Mick Taylor was the guitarist in Mayall's by then...not Peter Green. And Mick was awesome! I love his version of the Freddie King classic Driving Sideways. He had a 50's sunburst Les Paul and either a tweed 3x10 Fender Bandmaster or a 4 x 10 tweed Bassman. And I swear: it sounded like a 50 watt Marshall. Right after that I went searching for (and found!