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Just Broken Even |

Just Broken Even
The 69 & 70 Bath Festivals
of Blues and the Lincoln Folk Festival
The promoters of the legendary 1969 & 1970 Bath Festivals of Blues, and the Lincoln Folk Festival, are offering a rare chance for you to own a piece of Rock history.
Freddy Bannister & the Bannister Family, who were responsible for theamazing Bath/Knebworth/Lincoln festivals in the sixties & seventies, have put together a great limited edition commemorative set called 'Just Broken Even' and here's your chance to own one! The set is limited to 200, and each set is signed and numbered by Freddy himself.
Just Broken Even includes the following
Reproductions
of the tickets, handbills, including a handbill from The Pavilion, Bath
1963 advertising The Beatles forthcoming appearance, and programmes from
the legendary 1969 & 1970 Bath Festivals of Blues, and the Lincoln
Folk Festival
A hardback book by Freddy Bannister about promoting in the sixties, with such legendary figures as Pink Floyd, The Beatles, The Stones, Gene Vincent, Ike & Tina Turner, Roy Orbison, & later The Byrds, Jefferson Airplane, Frank Zappa & Led Zeppelin. It also describes in detail the inside stories behind the 1969 and 1970 Bath Festivals of Blues & The Lincoln Folk Festival.
An album of 28 photographs from these events.
Special Bonus: As a special gift to Fleeting Glimpse visitors, you will receive a 5 CD and a DVD free gift with the set, including:
A 75 min CD of the Pink Floyd set at Bath in 1970. (Atom Heart Mother aka The Amazing Pudding)
A 3 CD complilation set of Bath with Pink Floyd, Jefferson Airplane, Santana, Steppenwolf, Frank Zappa, The Byrds, Johnny Winter, Canned Heat, Fairport Convention, Country Joe, Hot Tuna and John Mayall with Pete Green
A 1 CD set from Lincoln Festival with James Taylor and The Byrds
A rare DVD of the BBC interviewing Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee which ends with them performing in the back of their limo on the way to the 1971 Lincoln festival it also includes various BBC interviews with the performers from this festival plus some great crowd shots etc.
A 1970 Bath Festival signed poster
The boxed set is strictly
limited to 200 worldwide and is priced at £75.00 plus £5.00 postage
UK $110 plus $22 postage U.S.A. Payment may be made over 4 months, if
required. For rest of world postage and general info email: bookset@rockmusicmemorabilia.com
PRICE: £75.00 Phone 01223-526073
(UK) or +44-1223-526073 (outside the UK). NOW £65.00
FOR VISITORS TO A FLEETING GLIMPSE - This wonderful set is priced at £75.00
on the Rock Music Memorabillia site, but when ordering, mention A Fleeting
Glimpse and get a £10.00 discount!
The Bannister's web site is at rockmusicmemorabilia.com where you can discover other rare gems.
REVIEWS
MOJO
The father of British rock festivals remembered
in plush tome. Being the tale of the first decade in the musical life
of promoter Freddy Bannister - the man who began by hiring Johnny Kidd
for £25 in 1960 then, after hiring the Stones, Beatles, Pink Floyd
and the Who for club dates, made his indelible mark with the Bath Festival
in 1970. Thoroughly readable, it's full of anecdotes(how Peter Grant thumped
Gene Vincent, how Cream took an audience vote as to whether or not they
should play. etc). Packaged in a box, with an array of reprinted festival
programmes, handbills, tickets and a book of glossy photos taken at gigs
he promoted. - Fred Dellar.
EXTRACTS FROM RECORD COLLECTORS TWO PAGE REVIEW
A BOXED SET OF MEMORABILIA BRINGS BACK
MEMORIES OF
THE BATH FESTIVALS AND THE 60s POP CIRCUIT
The bag of replica tickets, programmes and flyers is, at first glance, the most attractive part of the package for RC readers. The programmes (for the 1969 and 1970 Bath Festivals, and a subsequent folk festival featuring everyone from Pentangle to The Byrds, Tim Hardin to Dion) are evocative period pieces - for the innocence of their artists' biogs, for the sheer nostalgia of their vintage adverts, for their hippy jargon (the 1970 programme was taken over by Time Out boss Tony Elliott), and for their occassional period mistakes. It is amusing to see an ad for a forthcoming gig by 'Steffenwolf' , for instance, or a promise of an appearance in Bath by The Who, who were apparently best known for their hit single 'Something in The Air'.
Other memorabilia in the bag includes a flyer for The Bath Pavilion concerts in June 1963, which were to feature Shane Fenton and Fentones, Ketty Lester and, from Liverpool, The Beatles. (Even that early in their rise to fame, in costs 2/-, or 10p, more to see The Fabs than the Fentones.) There are festival tickets and posters and an information sheet for the 1970 Bath Festival of Blues and Progressive Music, which recommends that punters should bring the following items: Sunglasses, raincoat, blankets, heavy clothing, a sweater or coat, torch, elastoplasters, asprin, etc.and a groundsheet. No mention, youll notice, of those other 60s festival necessities, black Moroccan, Lebanese Hash, and brown acid .
For an authentic taste of the sixties rock scene, however, turn to Freddy Bannisters Just Broken Even book. Though the text could have benefited from some professional editing, its still a fascinating and entirely believable account of his activities as a promoter. Its great strength is that Bannister never bends the truth to glorify himself, or pretends to remember details that have escaped him. As an example, it would have been all too easy for him to wax lyrical about the glories of watching Jimi Hendrix at close quarters; but instead, he admits that this particular Hendrix experience left little impression on him, and moves on.
That lends an extra layer of realism to the stories that he does remember Robert Plant and his Band of Joy sabotaging a gig by The Honeycombs to ensure that their support slot would be massively extended; The Beatles backroom crew trying to force him to pay for imaginary damage to the groups van; The Byrds blowing their big chance to 1965 due to their sheer musical incompetence; Arthur Brown dealing with complaints about his bad language on stage with a choice two word response; and The Walker Brothers launching themselves on to the British gig circuit with a display of callous indifference to their fans.
Despite its lapses in proof reading the Just Broken Even book leaves the reader (like the Walker Brothers fans back in 1965) gagging for more. It might not have the big name appeal of a super star autobiography but the entire box set proves that small details bring the past alive far more effectively than the glossy blandness of most sixties memoirs. - Peter Doggett
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