Click here to listen to Geoff Downes - Asia 

Geoff Downes - Asia

Geoff takes us down memory lane and chats candidly about super group Asia.

Menu
Shopping Cart
ItemQty
Credit cardsCheckout
Mailing List
Name:
Address:
Email:
 Join
July Top Sellers
Click here to see the full details for An Evening of Yes Music Plus
1.
Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman and Howe
An Evening of Yes Music Plus
Click here to see the full details for Classical Wakeman Vol 1 - Live in Lugano
2.
Rick Wakeman
Classical Wakeman Vol 1 - Live in Lugano
Click here to see the full details for England's Heartbeat
3.
Shuttleworth
England's Heartbeat
Click here to see the full details for Live in Germany
4.
Showaddywaddy
Live in Germany
Click here to see the full details for Spectral Mornings
5.
Steve Hackett
Spectral Mornings
Click here to see the full details for
6.
Ginger Baker's Airforce
Click here to see the full details for A Time There Was
7.
Benjamin Britten
A Time There Was
Click here to see the full details for All My Loving - The Films of Tony Palmer
8.
Tony Palmer
All My Loving - The Films of Tony Palmer
Click here to see the full details for Brahms and The Singing Girls
9.
Tony Palmer
Brahms and The Singing Girls
Click here to see the full details for Canterbury Fayre 2001
10.
Hawkwind
Canterbury Fayre 2001
Newsprint
Click here to download issues of Newsprint in PDF format
Issue Seven
Featuring an audience with Dave Brock of Hawkwind
 
Release
Cover scan for Tapes of the Unexpected
 
£14.99
In stock
Buy

Catalogue number
VPDVD68
Release date
26/04/2010
Format
DVD
Region: 0
Ratio: 4:3
Sound: Stereo
Classification: E
Label
Voiceprint
Man
Tapes of the Unexpected
Disc 1
1. Definitely 2. Brother Arnold's 3. Red & White Striped Tent 4. Daughter of the Fireplace 5. Will The Christians Wait 5 Minutes 6. Angel Easy

The music that the Man band performed however was very much removed from the pop sensibilities of The Bystanders and more in keeping with the West Coast sound of American bands such as The Quicksilver Messenger Service. The band would record two albums for the Pye records progressive rock label Dawn  (Revelation and 2ozs Of Plastic With A Hole In The Middle) before leaving the label to sign with the more progressively minded Liberty records in 1970 and were to remain with the label until 1976 when they signed with MCA.

The seventies would be an interesting time for the band that saw many comings and goings of various members including the departure and return of key members Clive John, Deke Leonard and Martin Ace all at various points in fact at one point the only original member left in the band was Mickey Jones. The music of course never suffered and in a particularly fertile period the band managed to record and release, no less than seven studio albums. They also performed many wonderful concerts which even took the band to America where their particular brand of rock music found particular favour with audiences on the "West Coast".

Following the deal with MCA the band released just one more studio album (The Welsh Connection) before announcing their decision to call it a day going out for one more tour that would be recorded and finally be released as All's Well That Ends Well which at the time would have seemed to be it as far as the Man band were concerned.

In the wake of the split the various members all concentrated on solo projects including bands like the Flying Aces (Martin Ace) and The Flying Pigs (Mickey Jones) Drummer Terry Williams probably had the highest profile during this time playing first with fellow Welsh man Dave Edmunds and former Brinsley Schwarz bassist Nick Lowe in Rockpile. From there he went on to massive success as a member of Dire Straits and played on the multi million selling Brothers In Arms album. In 1983 however the band decided to re form and head out on the well trodden road. With a few line up changes over the years that is where they still are making albums and playing concerts.,

The footage contained on this DVD comes from German television performances in the seventies. Germany was a fertile ground for Man and the band regularly made the trip to Germany for both concerts and television performances. The earliest performance here features the line up of Mickey Jones, Martin Ace, Clive John, Jeff Jones and Ray Williams. The opening track 2:30 Definitely was not only a one off but an impromptu performance by the band featuring Martin Ace on harmonica. Basically the band had been asked to fill while the opening credits of the show were shown and the time they had to fill was two minutes thirty seconds. The second track Brother Arnold's Red and White Striped Tent originally came from the bands second album 2ozs of Plastic With A Hole In The Middle and comes from the same session that produced 2:30 Definitely. Both pieces were filmed in November 1969 and probably represent the earliest film of Man.

The next clip moves forward to April 1971 when the line up consisted of Mickey Jones, Martin Ace, Deke Leonard, Terry Williams and Clive John. This line up saw the return to the fold of Deke Leonard and the arrival of Terry Williams on drums who joined in October 1970. This time we are treated to full colour performances of two tracks, Daughter Of The Fireplace and  , which had originally appeared on the self titled Man album which, was the bands first album for Liberty/United Artists and had been released just the month before this performance was filmed. Both tracks ably illustrate just how tight the band was as a performing unit and how their almost instinctive jamming style had gelled into something quite special.

The final track featured on this DVD comes from a German television session filmed in November 1971. By this time Clive John had departed and both Deke Leonard and Martin Ace were not far behind both leaving in January 1972, Martin of his own choice and Deke? Well let's just say Deke thinks he was sacked and neither Micky Jones nor Terry Williams tend to disagree with him. The performance captured here is Angel Easy one of the shorter tracks Man recorded at the time. The track was the opening track of the bands most recent studio album, released the week the band performed here before the cameras. The album was entitled Do You Like It Here Now, Are You Settling In.

Man would not return to German television screens until April 1975 when the band played a live concert in the studio to promote their Slow Motion album. These television clips then represent some of the earliest film of Man live in the studio and are now being released officially for the first time in their own right.

Licensed courtesy of Joe Sweetinburgh: Impressive Records (Consultants) LLP impressiverecs@btinternet.com
Reviews
We're all too aware how television companies destroyed swathes of their archives during the 70's; you pnly have to look at the gaps in the list of existing Top of The Pops to see how little value was placed on historic recordings. Its great, then, to see releases such as those in Voiceprint's current range trawled from European stations. Perhaps our continental friends appreciated our home-grown acts more than we did.
  How else to explain the testimony to Man's early development? though this collection lasts only 25 minutes, it charts the group's progress from very early days, on a 1969 black-and-white edition of Germany's Beat-Club programme - complete with a curiously unmoved audience - through two further German appearances in 1971, while the sleevenotes tell of a full concert shot in Germany around the time of 1975 Sloe Motion album.
  The three number's from the Beat-Club's grainy monochrome give way to the vivid 70s in its full-colour glory and the April '71 promotion of tracks from their eponymous debut LP along with a version of Angel Easy from its follow-up, filmed November of th same year. They show just how dexterous and intuitive an outfit Man had become, and how fluid their line-up was. What a joy that these clips have survived the great archive cull.
Ian Abrahams - record Collector June 2010
"Historical film footage from past decades seems to be surfacing all the time. This time we're talking about the legendary Welsh band Man and this DVD includes five tracks and 25 minutes of their performances recorded for German television. This band that combined West Coast psychedelia, prog, blues and folk rock was always pretty popular in Germany. Man has never really been one of my favorite bands, although I have several of their albums and I liked what they were doing when I saw them live a couple of times in 1998. You just have to give credit to this band since they've been making some great stuff.

The first two tracks were shot in black and white in November 1969 and most probably present the earliest Man film material. "Definitely" is just a two-and-a-half-minute jam that the band put together for the program's opening sequence. Martin Ace plays harmonica on this one. A pretty interesting number to please all the fans. Then comes "Brother Arnold's Red and White Striped Tent" that was originally on the band's second album and this version works out very well. You can also see the very cool looking studio audience. Next in line we've got a couple of songs from April 1971: "Daughter of the Fireplace" and the psychedelic epic "Would the Christians Wait Five Minutes the Lions Are Having a Draw". These tracks also include some nice video effects that add the mind-expanding atmosphere of these brilliantly played jams. The band was in a really great shape at this point, I must say. The DVD's last number "Angel Easy" was shot for German TV in November 1971 and rocks hard. The sound and picture quality on this release is very good so I guess it's a must-have for all the Man fans."

www.manband.co.uk
22.07.10 by Dj Astro