Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream was a concert held in the Great Hall of the Alexandra Palace, London, on 29 April 1967. [1] The fund-raising concert for the counterculture paper International Times [1] [2] was organised by Barry Miles, John "Hoppy" Hopkins, David Howson, [1] Mike McInnerney and Jack Henry Moore.
The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream (2008), a documentary about the 1967 concert; Festival Express (2003) Fillmore (1972) Gimme Shelter (1970) Glastonbury Fayre (1972) Medicine Ball Caravan (1971) Monterey Pop (1968) Nambassa Festival [6] (1980) '’Rockin’ at the Red Dog: The Dawn of Psychedelic Rock'’ (2005) Woodstock (1970)
John's Children played at The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream concert at the Alexandra Palace in London on 29 April 1967. [3] Bolan left in June 1967, after four months with the band, following disagreements with the way Napier-Bell was producing the band's next single, "A Midsummer Night's Scene".
In April 1967, a benefit event took place at the Palace. The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream, organised by the International Times, demonstrated the importance of the quickly developing Underground scene. Although venues such as the UFO Club were hosting counter-cultural bands, this was certainly the largest indoor event at the time.
The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream, a 1967 concert in London; 50 Minute Technicolor Dream, a 1998 album by Tomorrow "Technicolor Dreams", a song by Status Quo from the album Picturesque Matchstickable Messages from the Status Quo, 1968 "Technicolor Dreams", a song by the Bee Gees from the album This Is Where I Came In, 2001
In April 1967, Pink Floyd were among 30 bands that played The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream benefit gig, which was organized for the "International Times" legal defense fund and held at Alexandra Palace in London. The other bands included The Who, The Move, The Pretty Things, Soft Machine, Tomorrow and The Creation.
In April 1967, the band performed at The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream, a UK Underground event organised by the International Times at Alexandra Palace. [3] [4] Other performing bands included Pink Floyd, The Pretty Things, Savoy Brown, The Crazy World of Arthur Brown, Soft Machine and The Move.
Tonite Lets All Make Love in London is a soundtrack album released on LP in 1968, for the 1967 documentary film of the same name, made by Peter Whitehead about the "swinging London" scene of the sixties.