Talk:The Crazy World of Arthur Brown

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Untitled[edit]

Carl Palmer was not just the US tour drummer. He also was on tour in Germany when the Beat Club video for Fire was shot. (I worked at venue that Carl played at in 1988 when he confirmed that he wore a semi-transparent mask for the TV show). Non-original research should be able to confirm this.22yearswothanks (talk) 00:52, 3 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]

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Members[edit]

The membership list as it stands is deeply flawed. It doesn't cite any sources. It doesn't list any members of the group's "Mark II" lineup (sometimes AKA "The Puddletown Express"; recorded the Strangelands album). The supposed 2000 "restart" date is also spurious, as a release under the "Crazy World" name (Vampire Love) came out in 1997. The entire member list from 2000 on is, as it stands, nonsensical- none of the listed members from 2000 or later (other than Jim Mortimore) are credited on any releases prior to 2014's Zim Zam Zim, and none of them at all are credited with performing on the 2019 release Gypsy Voodoo. None of the musicians credited on releases prior to Zim Zam Zim (Vampire Love, Tantric Lover, Vampire Suite) are listed (other than the aforementioned Mortimore), and none of the musicians credited on Gypsy Voodoo are listed. Z-Star has never been credited on any Crazy World releases at all, and doesn't seem to have been more than a touring or guest performer. Zim Zam Zim's credits list Brown, Mortimore, and Walker as members, but then explicitly list the other musicians performing on the record (including Rejchrtova and Gromniak) as "additional musicians." This is a tangled enough mess that I'm hesitant to try to fix it (especially since I have no experience working with the used timeline format), and I actually doubt that there are reliable sources available for membership or tenures post-1997. Reportage on the band tends to focus almost exclusively on Brown himself, rarely and isolatedly mentioning his backing band. Yspaddadenpenkawr (talk) 06:38, 24 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]