tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5225565884568983013.post6987823285743922385..comments2023-10-20T06:02:18.457-07:00Comments on Beside the B-side: Colorama: 'Turnham Green'Bob Stanleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18148756622365431327noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5225565884568983013.post-10966459078586158862015-06-23T22:25:00.602-07:002015-06-23T22:25:00.602-07:00Hi! Very nice to see your music related posts. Hop...Hi! Very nice to see your music related posts. Hope to have a good relationship with you and other Music lover. Visit and enjoy our The Very Best Online Electric Guitar Lessons<br />http://lowservices.com/the-very-best-online-electric-guitar-lessons/ <br />Good luck..!!!<br />Low Services Guitar Lessonshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14066327611884370933noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5225565884568983013.post-74938967332757480132013-02-16T12:12:26.229-08:002013-02-16T12:12:26.229-08:00I always thought I could live in London , but I ne...I always thought I could live in London , but I never really did. Bur what about Mcdonald and Giles? They were an early departure from King Crimson, and on their eponymous and only album "Turnham Green" is the first part of the opening "Suite in C". I took possession of it through a complicated series of swaps at my school (In Argyll in the 70’s). No one seemed to know who had bought it where. I was a sucker for that canterburyesque english whimsy at the time. Plus I had been through Turnham Green on the tube on my first adolescent trip to London and felt the connection. And I found Court of the Crimson King forbidding and distant (So I filed it with Tarkus as unlovable ) and this wasn’t .Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06102243805990097683noreply@blogger.com