Short: Improvised Jazz/Rock track by Jimmy Clytch Author: Jimmy Clytch Uploader: Roland Krüger Type: mods/8voic Architecture: generic Distribution: all This is a LIVE recording by Jimmy Clytch and his band CONSTRUCTION PLANT in Paris, 1979. Time 4:33 mins. Creation date 12-Oct-79 21:25:02 Run it with Delitracker or any other FTM-playable player you get hold on. Listen to what Jim had to say about it: "WOODBLOC will sound kind of old-fashioned to you and really: it is. Played at the legendary but still desastrous VersLeSoleil-concert in Paris, Oct. 12th 1979 at La Salle de deGaulle by the then so-called group CONSTRUCTION PLANT. ROBBING CRISTLE, PAIR UBE and the UNNYMOON KILLERS were with them. Great times these times. We sourly regret that most tapes from this concert were lost in that tragic car accident, when our van crashed into object TH-8975.322 which was drawing another circle in a rye field outside Nancy, France that night. Nothing serious happened to the driver Frank Whitney, accept he remembered having spent the night with Spiderwoman. That must be a joke since we all know that this girl had died at a serious lack of public attention in Hollywood 1932. Anyway - the tapes and a swiss army knife from underneath Frank's seat disappeared and probably now circulate in the Andromeda System, somewhere between Alpha Markab and Beta Scheat. Let me finish the story by affirming that this excellent and unique piece had been saved just because Frank had played the tape to his girlfriend Lauranne in Nykobing, Denmark via phone just before leaving Paris. Thanks to Eddie Dumb, drums, Thomas Hartlaub, woodbloc, Anette Smyrnjic, egitar, Gino Varese, electric violin, La Choire Eccentrique de Reims, and not to forget me, the bass player. We all have had a great time these days... Now Gino sold his violin, Thomas is driving taxi and Anette married a Canadian oil engineer. But the show must go on." I found this tape from my former neighbour at the roof-truss in a barn near Balmoral, Scotland where Jim used to spend his weekends during the early Nineties.