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Emerson, Lake & Palmer

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    4:35
    Lucky Man
    Lucky Man
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    2:57
    Fanfare For The Common Man (Single Edit)
    Fanfare For The Common Man (Single Edit)
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    6:42
    The Endless Enigma (Part One)
    The Endless Enigma (Part One)
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    4:45
    Karn Evil 9 1st Impression, Part 2
    Karn Evil 9 1st Impression, Part 2

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Tarkus

Aug 2012
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Live At The Mar Y Sol Festival '72

Mar 2012

Biography

Emerson, Lake & Palmer may have suffered at the hands of time more than any other Prog band. ELP are commonly associated with such 1970s excesses as the merging of classical music with rock, long (we're talking long) solos, and lyrical themes that had more to do with fantastical worlds than the real one. But dismissing the band as a Spinal Tap punchline ignores what a startlingly original and ambitious group they really were, especially when you put them back in their early '70s context. Keith Emerson stands as one of the most innovative and talented keyboardists ever to beat up an organ. Not only did he elevate the status of his instrument, so that guitarists were no longer the rock world's only virtuosos, he was also one of the first players to put the Moog synthesizer in the spotlight. The other members of the group were likewise musicians of note: Carl Palmer astonished would-be drum wizards with his maniacal and versatile playing, while Greg Lake not only played bass and guitar (and sang with one of the sweetest voices in rock) but produced the band's records as well.

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Mitchell D. Zinn
Happy Hippy
Mitchell D. Zinn and Happy Hippy have been listening to Emerson, Lake & Palmer lately

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