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the duke

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Everything posted by the duke

  1. the duke

    Amber Wilson

    From Aberdeen's Steve Lillywhite haha.
  2. mastering http://www.exchangemastering.co.uk/services.html
  3. mastering Graham Durham at the Exchange Camden London.Used him before and he's ace!
  4. I know him well enough in person and he wouldn't say boo to a quadraplegic.
  5. erm dude ......think you best get a life or a girlfriend...oh shit you you can,t get one of them cause you are such a cunt....mmm London ...IN YOUR DREAMS BRO ...hahahahahah
  6. A Warning that,s all.....get back in your Aberdeen Forum Box.....FOOL!
  7. the full circumference.... Not a good idea,they will only sap your energy for their own gains.I had a very bad experience with them.......Don't believe the stuff you read about them!
  8. Yep.... thanks for submitting...pussy!
  9. CUNT.....! Dont know who you are but you must be a fucking total loser with that profile and your statements......!
  10. still didn't see you at his funeral.!
  11. No not your friends ..YOU...what have YOU done?
  12. Didn't see you at Steve's funeral bro...oh shit who's Steve........fuck off
  13. don't have to think about it...i know bruv...!:up:
  14. mmmm but you have not volunteered there yourself,so how can the experiences of your friends help you make a judgment of the Foyer....?
  15. Not a good idea,they will only sap your energy for their own gains.I had a very bad experience with them.......Don't believe the stuff you read about them!
  16. No mate,it's not.I think when people are used to playing at a semi pro level ,they get used to the fact that they are not going to get paid much.I'm sure your nights attract a large crowd,therefor someone is making money.....you or Hen.The first couple of times i saw the Mashers at the lampie there was about 80 people there,don't know why they went to the shitty Tunnels.Anyway funk on and have a good een. Best. The Duke8-)
  17. Motown drummer Uriel Jones dies at 74 DETROIT (AP) Uriel Jones, a drummer whose versatile, passionate beat fueled classic Motown hits, has died following complications from a heart attack. He was 74. Jones who died Tuesday, according to sister-in-law Leslie Coleman was part of the Funk Brothers, the house band on Motown recordings. He played on numerous tracks, including "My Girl" and "Ain't Too Proud to Beg" performed by the Temptations, "Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I'm Yours" by Stevie Wonder, "What Becomes of the Brokenhearted" by Jimmy Ruffin, and versions of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" by Marvin Gaye and Gladys Knight and the Pips. Paul Riser, a Motown arranger-musician, said Jones had a distinctive, driving sound that drew inspiration from his days as a boxer. Yet, Riser said, Jones also could play with restraint when the song called for it. "There was a pulse in his playing ... that nobody else had," said Riser, who co-wrote "What Becomes of the Brokenhearted." "He loved music for the sake of music. He loved when it came out good and he hated when it came out bad." Riser said Jones often played with the surviving Funk Brothers, who were the focus of an acclaimed 2002 documentary film called "Standing in the Shadows of Motown." That film brought the players belated recognition in the wider world that largely escaped them in Motown's 1960s and early '70s heyday. Riser said he spoke last week with Jones, who was excited about "getting busy again" since being hospitalized with an early February heart attack. "He expressed to me he missed his first Funk Brothers gig (last month)," Riser said. "I could sense the disappointment in his voice. There was an energy he exuded to get back in the band and get going again." Jones was one of many Motown musicians who went to the former studio in the Motown Historical Museum on Jan. 12 to help kick off a year of festivities marking the label's 50th anniversary. Abdul "Duke" Fakir, the lone surviving original member of the Four Tops, used the occasion to praise Jones and his fellow Funk Brothers. "When they'd finish a song, we, the Four Tops, had a nice phrase," Fakir said. "We'd say, `Wow, another red carpet to ride on.'" In an interview with The Associated Press after the ceremony, Jones said the cramped studio where most of Motown's early songs were created deserved as much credit as the players. "This room is alive," he said. "As far as the musicians are concerned ... we had to have eye contact with one another because we fed off one another. The place just created its own sound." Coleman described her brother-in-law who's survived by his wife, June, and three children as a man of humor and humility. "He was a father to the fatherless, a brother to the brotherless," she said. "He had a love for people."
  18. I think when someone pays them proper money as they are all working musicians....lol
  19. Erm there is a band called Zony Mash who sometimes play the tunnels,they absolutely smash the funk thing!
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