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Gong Live Etc. is a live album by Gong, recorded between 1973 and 1975 and originally released in 1977.It is a set of live recordings (including some two-track "off-the-desk" material), studio out-takes and BBC session recordings spanning the years 1973 to 1975.
The poster advertising the event can be seen in the photo collage included in the album Gong Live Etc, also released in 1977. The Gong lineup was a reunion of the Angel's Egg / You -era band, featuring the return of Daevid Allen , Gilli Smyth , Steve Hillage and Miquette Giraudy , who had left in 1975 and so were not part of the then-current ...
The next Uncon was a 3-day event held at the Melkweg in Amsterdam on 3–5 November 2006, with practically all Gong-related bands present: 'Classic' Gong (Allen, Smyth, Malherbe, Blake, Howlett, Travis, Taylor, plus the return of Steve Hillage and Miquette Giraudy), System 7, The Steve Hillage Band, Hadouk, Tim Blake and Jean-Philippe Rykiel ...
Timothy Blake (born 6 February 1952, in Shepherd's Bush, London) is an English keyboardist, synthesist, vocalist, and composer, who is known for working with Gong, Hawkwind and his synthesizer and light performances as Crystal Machine, with the French Light artist Patrice Warrener.
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Live Floating Anarchy 1977 is a 1978 live album by Planet Gong, a combination of Gong's Daevid Allen and Gilli Smyth and the band Here & Now.It was recorded in Toulouse on 6 November 1977, apart from the track "Opium for the People" which was a studio recording.
Gazeuse! (French for 'Sparkling!', 'Fizzy!' or 'Effervescent!') is the seventh album released under the name Gong and the de facto debut album by Pierre Moerlen's Gong.It was released in late 1976.
Expresso II is the eighth studio album released under the name Gong and the de facto second album by Pierre Moerlen's Gong.It released in February 1978. [2]Featuring an all-instrumental jazz-driven sound, notable for the prominent use of vibraphone, it has little to do with the psychedelic space rock of Daevid Allen's Gong, even though the two bands share a common history.