5 Comments (since 14 Nov 2012)
"Evident in all [these songs] was Kitchener's propensity for crafting meldic lines that were ideally suited to the steelpan format." On Lord Kitchener's relationship with steel pans: http://www.panonthenet.com/articles/2009/kitch_pan_music-2-4-09.htm
Background features Lord Kitch with his long-time collaborator panist Ken "Professor" Philmore on the cover of Pan magazine (fall 1987 issue).
"It' is fantastic in every sense, the music you get from these instruments"
@stuarthoughton Aren't the lyrics awesomely silly? It's fun to hear this side of Kitch, a departure from his usual, uh, preoccupation... ;-)
I enjoyed that way more than I thought I would, or probably even should!
5 Comments (since 14 Nov 2012)
Han
"Evident in all [these songs] was Kitchener's propensity for crafting meldic lines that were ideally suited to the steelpan format." On Lord Kitchener's relationship with steel pans: http://www.panonthenet.com/articles/2009/kitch_pan_music-2-4-09.htm
Han
Background features Lord Kitch with his long-time collaborator panist Ken "Professor" Philmore on the cover of Pan magazine (fall 1987 issue).
stuarthoughton
"It' is fantastic in every sense, the music you get from these instruments"
Han
@stuarthoughton Aren't the lyrics awesomely silly? It's fun to hear this side of Kitch, a departure from his usual, uh, preoccupation... ;-)
phlpthomas
I enjoyed that way more than I thought I would, or probably even should!