BOC: So long and thanks for the fish
Abra Cadabra
anacondaconan at GMAIL.COM
Thu Apr 2 13:24:24 EDT 2015
both Heaven Forbid and Curse Of The Hidden Mirrors are nice albums
from the latter day BOC. I guess unlike the continuing ship sailing of
Hawkwind, BOC is pretty much "all is said and done and discussed" and
less BOC fans in that sense...
I was a HW fan and got into BOC after this list in the mid 90s...
picked up Workshop Of The Telescopes and did some BOC trades i used to
find CD copies of Imaginos used in Oslo and traded them rarities here
for HW or other stuff...
Christian
2015-04-02 12:39 GMT+02:00 Jonathan Jarrett <jjarrett at coriolis.greenend.org.uk>:
> On Wed, 1 Apr 2015, Jeff Thompson wrote:
>>
>> Yeah. Where HAVE the BOC discussions on the net migrated Do people just
>> hang out on Eric and Donald's FB pages or something? I really like the
>> listserv format. Maybe lists, like usenet, are a dying thing.
>
>
> This does, alas, seem to be the state of things. PhD Comics, as so
> often, has it about right:
> http://phdcomics.com/comics/archive.php?comicid=1790
>
>> Haven't seen Al in a while. How many of us BOC fans are left?
>
>
> Well, I came here as a BÖC fan, met Hawkwind and got sucked in... I
> would probably go and see BÖC one more time, but they've been less exciting
> each time I have, and I'm afraid to utterly spoil my memory of them. First
> saw them in 1998, on the Heaven Forbid tour, with Eric still in full voice,
> Danny Maranda on bass and Bobby Rondinelli on drums and that was great,
> tight, fierce and funny when there was a chance to be, Allen coming to the
> front for 'In Thee' and 'Last Days of May'. I still think there's some good
> stuff on that album that is unjustly forgotten. But each time they make it
> here it's with a different rhythm section, fewer original members and less
> energy... Al, however, I will go see in any band he can get over here if I
> only find out about it, and therein lies the problem, because I used to get
> most of my gig notices through this here list! Yours,
> Jon
>
> --
> Jonathan Jarrett "There is scarce any tradition or popular error
> Medievalist historian but stands also delivered by some good author."
> Birmingham (Sir Thomas Browne, "Pseudodoxia Epidemica", 1646)
More information about the boc-l
mailing list