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Length: 2:49
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Fire, I'll take you to burn
Fire, I'll take you to learn
I'll see you burn
You fought hard and you saved and earned
But all of it's going to burn
And your mind, your tiny mind
You know you've really been so blind
Now 's your time burn your mind
You're falling far too far behind
Oh no
Oh no
Oh no
You're gonna burn
Fire, to destroy all you've done
Fire, to end all you've become
I'll feel you burn
You've been living like a little girl
In the middle of your little world
And your mind, your tiny mind
You know you've really been so blind
Now's your time to burn your mind
You're falling far too far behind
Fire, I'll take you to burn
Fire, I'll take you to learn
I'll see you burn
You're gonna burn
You're gonna burn
You're gonna burn
Burn
Burn
Burn
Burn
Burn
Burn
Fire, I'll take you to burn
Fire, I'll take you to learn
Fire, I'll take you to burn
Fire, I'll take you to learn
Arthur Brown was also the lead vocalist on the cut "The Tell-Tale Heart" on the 1976 album Tales of Mystery and Imagination by the Alan Parsons Project.
Well i never knew that! My older brother had that album and there's some weird & wonderful stuff on it.
Another nugget of musical history that i've learnt here on RP. Thanks again!
Feels like the spoken intro should lead into something a bit more 'metal'.
I dunno, in 1968 this was probably pretty metal.
Thanks RP!
What kind of bike had it been? You were lucky doing that!
My friend and I were both riding identical Bultaco Metralla Mk2's with full racing farings. The same bikes that had taken first and second place at the Isle of Man TT the previous year.
Part luck as all motorcycle riding is. Skill and restraint also played a large role. We lived to tell about the epic journey with no mishaps.
The wild man Arthur Brown opened the show for Cream on a soccer pitch just outside of London, July 1968. I was there having just completed a 14 country tour of Western Europe, North Africa and The UK by motorcycle. During the opening set the fans in the bleachers started jumping up and down and swaying the bleachers back and forth sideways until the bleachers collapsed. Many people were injured and taken away by ambulance.
Unaffected by the chaos, Cream took the stage and delivered a killer show.
The Crazy World of Arthur Brown indeed.
What kind of bike had it been? You were lucky doing that!
During the opening set the fans in the bleachers started jumping up and down and swaying the bleachers back and forth sideways until the bleachers collapsed. People were injured and taken away by ambulance.
Undetered by the chaos, Cream took the stage and delivered a killer show.
The Crazy World of Arthur Brown indeed.

Today was The Nutcracker (Chinese Dance) to this!








And now, all the sudden, I’m 68

Real nice set you've got going there B !
A real period piece, avec extra fromage.
Got to number 1 in the UK. It was the first piece of music I ever bought. I used the money my gran gave me and my father strongly disapproved of using it to buy "this kind of rubbish".
A real period piece, avec extra fromage.
"Drachen Theaker was the original drummer for The Crazy World of Arthur Brown, founded by Arthur Brown, and played on the band's eponymous album, including the song "Fire". Theaker abruptly left the band during a U.S. tour in 1969. Carl Palmer was quickly recruited as a replacement and became a permanent band member."



Sometimes you nail the segue, sometimes the segue nails you. With a pencil.

"Yeah, that's gotta sting. Oh good, some earwax."
My first time hearing this song. I'll let you know how I feel about it after the next 1,846 times.
Good answer. You made me laugh, Chicago dude. And I don't think I fully appreciate the 100K Pyramid reference, either. Still clever even then. Anyway, I just reacted because the local university near me has the same (more cowbell) slogan that they yell at all their football games.
Boise State with that wild blue field?
Glad I made you laugh.
DB
cow — udder — cream — churn — butter — bell
I saw that on The $100,000 Pyramid.
Good answer. You made me laugh, Chicago dude. And I don't think I fully appreciate the 100K Pyramid reference, either. Still clever even then. Anyway, I just reacted because the local university near me has the same (more cowbell) slogan that they yell at all their football games.
Hope you can still sleep at night.... God knows the stress you must be under after this revoltin' development.
Chicago dude, what do you know about cowbell?
cow — udder — cream — churn — butter — bell
I saw that on The $100,000 Pyramid.
Yes indeed. That REALLY pushes this one over the top. In a good way.
I remember hearing that AB on occasion (regularly?) arrived on stage to start his set via crane and had somehow contrived to do so while appearing to have his hair on fire. Remember reading it in some concert review - or maybe that review was part of the liner notes on the original vinyl album cover. Too far back and, well, you know.....
Chicago dude, what do you know about cowbell?
No entry yet in Wikipedia for Crazy World of Arthur Brown. Wow.
Yes indeed. That REALLY pushes this one over the top. In a good way.
Truth is stranger than fiction!
A real period piece, avec extra fromage.
Ageed. Did he do any other music of note ? Or would that be an opinion ?

A real period piece, avec extra fromage.
I get such a kick out of this tune!
Good fun.
Kind of makes me think of a groovier version of Alice Cooper (the band, not the solo artist)
Awesome to be able to get away with that.
I'd heard the performances were also ridiculously weird.

And Ring of Fire by Cash!

I have to say, too, that Alice Cooper got all of his vaudevillian stage show ideas from watching Arthur at Detroit's Grande Ballroom, then a few months later at Cobo when Arthur opened for the Doors (along with the MC5).
That's Carl Palmer of ELP on the drum kit.
I had the 45, too. Do you remember that the leadout groove had some kind of sound effect on it? I can't remember exactly what it was, but it made the record seem even more exotic. Strangely, this 45 was also in the jukebox we had in my church youth group's "teen room". We'd only play it if the grown ups were busy elsewhere, for fear they'd remove it.



Cheers
Radio Paradise is both enjoyable and educational.
thanks Bill!
I would put this one firmly in the first category.

Is it more weird now? I do admit it is a bit strange, but was it more closer to normal in the 60's?



I can't even begin to think how long it has been since I last heard this one! BURN!
Ditto!
Weird, I dig!