[Postcard2] Plant/Kruass in Nashville

Frederich S. Beahm fsbeahm at comcast.net
Tue Jul 22 19:13:48 PDT 2008


Ah, I stand corrected. I recently learned he was a talented strings 
arranger. (Stones "She's a Rainbow.) At any rate the current mando was 
superior.


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Brad Bechtel" <wellvis at well.com>
To: "Americana Music List" <postcard2 at lists.drizzle.com>
Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 12:00 AM
Subject: Re: [Postcard2] Plant/Kruass in Nashville


> Actually the mandolin was by John Paul Jones.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Paul_Jones_(musician)
>
> On Jul 21, 2008, at 7:20 PM, Frederich S. Beahm wrote:
>
>> I have to come close to agreeing with you on the drummer. He was one  of 
>> the best I've seen.  I was also impressed by how into "Nothing"  Plant 
>> was. I particularly enjoyed the highly weird rendition of  "Black Dog". 
>> "The Battle of Evermore" was also a nice touch, with  Krauss doing the 
>> Sandy Denny part. Duncan is a vastly superior  mandolin player over Jimmy 
>> Page. (I'm assuming Page did the mando on  Zep IV.)
>
> 



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