http://www.greglake.com/
Very sad to learn of this. An LP copy of Pictures at an Exhibition was one of exactly three rock records in my father's otherwise purely classical record collection (Deep Purple's classical mashup and The Nice's Five Bridges Suite being the other two). On very special occasions, he could be persuaded to dig it out and put it on. A friend of my parents leant me a copy of Tarkus, and I dutifully dubbed both albums onto each side of a cassette, which I then played to death as a kid and teenager. Greg's voice was one of the standout elements of ELP for sure.
A very sad loss.
At this time of year I always look forward to hearing this - one of my favourite songs, that I never get tired of listening to.
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/JPm6CheT6rs" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
A sad day, indeed.
No, no and NO!
Lake was one of my favorite bass players and ELP was always tops in my list of favorite bands. 2016 can go right on out, please.
RIP Greg, and thanks so much for all the wonderful music.
2016 is a dangerous year for musical heroes...
R.I.P Greg.
It's a very hard year.
2016 can FOAD already.
:(
Flat Eric, I feel just as you do. I love the Father Christmas song, although it usually turns into an earworm that I whistle for a couple of days after hearing it.
A truly iconic voice. There are only so many that you recognize instantly and connect to their body of work; Greg Lake was one.
R.I.P.
Check this performance at St. Bride's Church in London:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6-PAKOt7sM
RIP Greg. His bass work on Trilogy blew my teenage mind, and it went on from there. What a voice too.
Cancer, darn. Not a lucky man, the angelic one.
(http://i212.photobucket.com/albums/cc65/aspinall_2007/GL87789.jpg)
no words... rip...
So sad--a great loss.
Damn, I'm running out of heroes :sad:. RIP
Rick
Gotta say I loved his bass work also...
The tone he got was wonderful, and just made the songs soar...
And could he sing...I saw him in Cincinnati, and besides being the loudest show (ELP) I have ever seen, I was amazed at how effortless his singing seemed.
I remember him casually chewing gum while he was singing...
RIP
One of the great singing bassists. Crimson was a huge early influence of mine.
Sad to see him go but he sure left an impressive catalog of work.
The voice of a generation.
Back in the heyday of ELP, they were on of the most impressive shows you could catch. I saw them about 12 times and they just kept getting better and better. They actually were not really my style of music , but their live shows were absolutely breathtaking. To date, still one of the best live bands I've ever seen. The individual and combined musicianship, the theatrics, the dynamics and Greg Lakes piercing and pure vocals made for one helluva show 8).
Rick