Yes! Definitely James Gang. Thanks for reminding of them. They were very good and had that classic heavy metal sound of that time.
I am not a musician of any kind nor do I know any famous musicians. Went to quite a few concerts while in college. Had a roommate one year who was friends with a well known pop star from the Philly area. Me?- nope, zip, zero, nada for playing any instrument or singing. However, over time, I developed a sensitive and well tuned ear ear thanks to an outstanding music professor of an elective course I took in college. Spent practically the entire time in the audio lab. That is really where I learned to hear what I was listening to. Taking that class was of the best decisions I ever made in school. Had nothing to do with my majors nor any degree.
I learned to "extract", identify and analyze the quality of sound and place in the composition of practically every instrument in a full orchestra. Also leaned, of course, the history of music from the earliest monk vocals though the classics through modern.
I listened a couple of times the other day to one of the pieces I posted by the Brit band, The Who playing their 1978 recording of
Won't Get Fooled Again. What struck me most, aside from the overall show put on in the production of that video, was the mastery of the bass guitar by John Entwistle. It requires concentration, but all those subtle, complex runs he does in the bass background is unbelievable! That's the thing about much of the bass work in many of these pieces of music... commonly very subtle and often missed.
So with that, here's an extreme mix of eclectic productions I get a kick out of listening to on occasion.
You may need to turn the volume way up on this first one, dang it, as is common with many Youtube audio productions. As an aside, I'll be where this was made in about a month.
This one by Barry McGuire self explains and just like those early ones by CCR, The Animals, etc., we played it over and over...
IMO, one of the best live concert vocals of all time by Lisa Kelly, Celtic Woman
Outstanding '97 concert production of
Sweet Home Alabama by Lynyrd Skynyrd.
Wouldn't doubt this gets the PC woke censorship treatment in some circles, but to hell with that