NancyJohnson Posted Friday at 13:31 Posted Friday at 13:31 (edited) In an almost surreal moment earlier today, I was served in a decorating centre by a drummer of a band who scored a handful of Billboard Top 30 singles in the 1980s/90s and (on further investigation) have over 1.5 billion streams on Spotify (nearly 12m listens a month). Bonkers. [Edit]. One video has a staggering 890m plays on You Tube. Double bonkers. Edited 21 hours ago by NancyJohnson 2 Quote
Steve Browning Posted Friday at 13:40 Posted Friday at 13:40 Might he be between tours? I did temp work when I was in the Pretty Things, and Dick (original Rolling Stone and guitarist) picked tomatoes when we were off the road. 1 Quote
cetera Posted Friday at 13:48 Posted Friday at 13:48 I bought a TV from John Lewis in Kingston about 20 years ago. The chap who served me was 'Rick Rock' (Rick Goldstein) who was formerly of Sham 69 and was the drummer of The Bootleg Beatles when I toured Japan with them back in 1996! 2 Quote
theplumber Posted Friday at 14:11 Posted Friday at 14:11 I'm sure I seen Rod Stewart driving a bus through Glasgow a couple of weeks ago....... 2 Quote
Rich Posted Friday at 14:25 Posted Friday at 14:25 There's a guy works down our chip shop swears he's Nah, not really. 3 Quote
AMV001 Posted Friday at 15:41 Posted Friday at 15:41 2 hours ago, NancyJohnson said: In an almost surreal moment earlier today, I was served in a decorating centre by a drummer of a band who scored a handful of Billboard Top 30 singles in the 1980s/90s and (on further investigation) have over 1.5 billion streams on Spotify (nearly 12m listens a month). Bonkers. Maybe he wasn't a songwriter and earns no publishing royalties. Or he could have been a non-partner, just a waged employee. Quote
jonno1981 Posted Friday at 16:05 Posted Friday at 16:05 You wish you’d hired a better lawyer to negotiate your contract 30 years earlier! 1 Quote
miles'tone Posted Friday at 16:10 Posted Friday at 16:10 ...I'll let you know after mine starts! 😄 Quote
fretmeister Posted Friday at 16:20 Posted Friday at 16:20 I think it was one of the guys in Angel Witch (NWOBHM) who opened a rehearsal studio in Northampton. No idea if it is still there. Quote
JapanAxe Posted Friday at 16:28 Posted Friday at 16:28 Earl Slick (Bowie guitarist) packed in music in the 90s and got a job selling timeshares. He had a narrow escape from a car fire which made the news, prompting Bowie to get back in touch with him. Quote
Mykesbass Posted Friday at 20:55 Posted Friday at 20:55 Mel who ran a cassette manufacturer that I used to use was the cellist in ELO. Quote
LowB_FTW Posted Friday at 21:07 Posted Friday at 21:07 7 hours ago, NancyJohnson said: In an almost surreal moment earlier today, I was served in a decorating centre by a drummer of a band who scored a handful of Billboard Top 30 singles in the 1980s/90s and (on further investigation) have over 1.5 billion streams on Spotify (nearly 12m listens a month). Bonkers. When I read the title of this thread, then read the content of the OP, I thought it was @NancyJohnson's career that was over. I thought you'd been served legal papers, not served by someone at a till/counter. 😂 It wasn't until reading the replies I understood the OP a little better. I have nothing to add to the thread aside from the above. Have a great evening everyone. Mark Quote
Bilbo Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago An industry that exploits it's workers and then discards them without a second thought? Nah. It'll never happen. 1 Quote
Beedster Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago 9 hours ago, Mykesbass said: Mel who ran a cassette manufacturer that I used to use was the cellist in ELO. Hugh McDowell, who was the other ELO cellist of that era, taught on my Electronic Music Technology course in the early 80's Quote
NancyJohnson Posted 21 hours ago Author Posted 21 hours ago Just to answer, he said he's not between tours, he still plays drums in a couple of local projects. He's 67 (doesn't look it). 1 Quote
Dan Dare Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago 10 minutes ago, NancyJohnson said: Just to answer, he said he's not between tours, he still plays drums in a couple of local projects. He's 67 (doesn't look it). This. once you reach pension age, the mortgage is paid off and the kids are off your hands, you can just play what you enjoy and not worry about whether it will go anywhere or pay the bills. A job keeps some money rolling in and helps you stay in touch with the human race. It's a good place to be. 2 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.