
Underground / Wood In Your Fire / Shattered Glass / Let's Eat / Danger Zone / Land Of The Blind / Wondrous Place / Maybe / Lover And Fighter / Fortune Teller / My Old Radio / Sex On Legs.
Produced by B. Almquist & The Pirates.
The Pirates: M. Green: guitars & vocals / R. Parol: drums / B.J. Anders: bass & vocals.
Mick Green is one of the most self-effacing guitar legends in rock & roll. Since the early '60s, as a member of Johnny Kidd & the Pirates, his guitar style -- mixing lead and rhythm parts in one -- has been an inspiration to three generations of musicians, including the Who's Pete Townshend and Dr. Feelgood's Wilko Johnson. Yet he remains amazingly elusive as a subject, preferring to stay in the background except when he's playing.
Green's first steady gig was as a member of the Red Caps, a group (named in honor of Gene Vincent's band the Blue Caps) that backed late-'50s pop-rocker Cuddly Dudley. The Red Caps' membership also included guitarist Johnny Patto, bassist Johnny Spence, and drummer Frank Farley, all of whom had joined Johnny Kidd in 1961 as the new lineup of his backing band the Pirates. By March of 1962, however, Patto had tired of touring and quit, and he was replaced by Green. It was a song called "I'll Never Get Over You," which rose to number four, that established Green, his searing lead guitar being one of the most aggressive sounds heard on record in England during this period. Though it would take a few years for anyone to find it out, the song became practically an anthem for a generation of garage rock and punk enthusiasts. As a member of the Pirates, Mick Green became one of a tiny handful of young guitar heroes of the pre-Beatles era in English rock & roll. Generating a loud, slashing sound from his Fender Telecaster Deluxe that combined the lead and rhythm guitar parts in one, Green's playing ran completely counter to the more open two-guitar sound that dominated English rock & roll.

around the world as the backing band for Billy J. Kramer, but needed more muscle in their live sound. Green shored up that band, which, with his arrival, became one of the few groups of the period to boast a double lead guitar lineup. He made them one of the most respected backing groups in England, although the only hit Green ever played on was the distinctly pop-oriented "Trains and Boats and Planes." He was later joined in the Dakotas by ex-Pirate/Red Cap Frank Farley on drums, and the two worked together up through 1967, when the Dakotas broke up. (Kidd re-formed the Pirates and was attempting a comeback that ended with his death in a car crash in 1966, though the newer Pirates kept playing together until 1967). Green hooked up for a short time with Cliff Bennett before he and Farley became part of Engelbert Humperdinck's backing band, spending seven years in that well-remunerated but musically low-visibility position, playing Las Vegas and related venues. Green later played in the group Shanghai, which included John "Speedy" Keen in the lineup, which lasted for two years.



Les Stones s'enlisaient , "Raw Power" avait déjà presque trois ans ... le rock s'endormait quand sortit "Down by the Jetty"! Le disque entier était laminé par la télécaster infernale d'un Wilko Johnson possédé ! Et les magazines spécialisés parlaient de l'énorme influence d'un certain Mick Green , ex-guitariste des Pirates de Johnny Kidd. L'auteur entre autres de"Shakin' all over" que les Who dynamitaient sur "Live At Leeds"...
"Eté 76... après la fermeture des pubs de Londres, il ne restait plus que les boîtes de nuit dont le Dingwalls à Camden. Une boîte tout en longueur avec un bar qui n'en finissait pas et où s'accoudaient indifférement musiciens et anonymes...
A gauche, une batterie blanche à l'aspect futuriste, occupait presque toute la petite scène. En les voyant ridiculement déguisés en pirates prendre la scène d'assaut, on aurait pu avoir un doute.
Nous avions tort ! En une chanson ils mirent tout le monde d'accord !!!
Et nous ne sommes pas prêts d'oublier Mick Green cisaillant l'espace de petits riffs rageurs et qui seul ... sonnait comme deux!
Ce soir-là, les pirates étaient des rois lançés à l'abordage de nos âmes et même Lemmy souriait sous sa moustache d'ogre! ..."

"Guitarist Mick Green has passed away aged 65. One of the original breed of authentic British lead guitarists, Green initially lent his considerable skills to Johnny Kidd & the Pirates before becoming guitarist of choice for artists such as Van Morrison, Sir Paul McCartney and Bryan Ferry."
R.I.P. So long Mick ...
3 commentaires:
THE PIRATES "Land of the blind"
Enjoy it & leave comments !
Shakin' all over !
thx pour la culture
Anonymoussalex : Me souviens d'une soirée au Gibus avec les Dogs. Laboubée, son air hautain et ses lunettes noires, classieux... et puis les Pirates dont le leader (Mick Green, donc) jouait ce soir-là avec son fils... de quoi railler les déjà vieux pour se faire une contenance jusqu'à l'arrivée sur scène... concert extra au final !!!
Enregistrer un commentaire