bounty37h (07-03-2017),fearofpopvol1 (07-02-2017),goreds2 (08-04-2017),Kingspoint (07-02-2017)
bounty37h (07-03-2017),Dom Heffner (07-04-2017)
UNC Tar Heels 2017 National Champions 6 time NCAA Champs!!!
57, 82, 93, 05, 09, 17
Go Heels!!!!!
Kingspoint (07-04-2017)
Last edited by Dom Heffner; 07-04-2017 at 12:43 PM.
As a collector every now and then an item really speaks to me. It can be something simple like a signature on a favorite album or image. Other times it's the history of the item- where it's been, who owned it, what it was used for.
The latter is the most fun to collect. I have a friend who owns the road case that carried Kurt Cobain's guitars on both the Nevermind and In Utero tours. So not only did this thing travel around the world and carry Kurt Cobain's touring guitars, it also holds other stories such as the band and crew using it for a lunch table.
Recently I came across a pretty cool item with similar type history: Bill Ward's (Black Sabbath) first professional set of cymbals. Ordinarily that wouldn't be a big deal- but bands formed in the 1960s and 1970s didn't have the budgets for multiple instruments- they would drag their one guitar or drum kit with them everywhere. From the studio and onto a grueling tour schedule.
In 1968, Bill Ward was 19 years old and about to join his first band, Mythology, along with future Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi. So into Yardley's- a music store in Birmingham England with incredible history all its own- he went to purchase his first set of professional cymbals.
Mythology was short lived, lasting just a few months and Ward and Iommi were in search of a new band. After seeing a notice posted at Yardley's by Ozzy Osbourne, they all formed a band called Earth along with Geezer Butler. Realizing that another band had the same name, they went with Black Sabbath shortly after.
All through these changes, Bill Wards first set of cymbals - Super Zyn 5 Star to be precise- came along for the ride.
And what a ride it would be. Used to rehearse, write, and record the first 3 Black Sabbath albums (Black Sabbath, Paranoid, and Master of Reality)as well as the subsequent tours, they would be a vital part of the band's early history. All the cymbal sounds you hear on hits like "Paranoid," "Iron Man," "The Wizard" and many more were made by the ones posted below. Just super cool. And with the original case from 1968. These are also the cymbals you see in the "Iron Man" and other music video promo clips from the early 1970s. And used on the show Top of the Pops, too.
Ward told Rolling Stone:
When I was trying to negotiate to get these, Ward's manager was very adamant that I not split up the set- there are 6 cymbals in all- and kept reiterating the importance of them. Before approving the sale, his team wanted to know aboiut me, my plans for them, etc. I've never been through anything quite like it. I was offered to meet with Mr Ward and discuss them, but with a new baby I just couldn't make the trip. Anyhow, his attachment to them was inspiring, and adds to the romance of it all.To somebody else it might be stupid, but I noticed that some of my original Zyn cymbals were selling. To be honest, they'd been in storage for years, they'd been in storage for 25, 30 years – 35, 40 years. They come all the way back from Field Farm, where we lived back in the early Seventies. They've just travelled with us. What it is, is just the memories that come with those Zyn cymbals. These are some of the cymbals that we used on early Black Sabbath recordings. Also, I used them onstage. Some of them survived.
Thought you guys would enjoy the story and seeing these!
Last edited by Dom Heffner; 08-13-2017 at 01:27 AM.
bounty37h (08-14-2017),Redsfaithful (08-13-2017)
Redsfaithful (10-16-2017)
Kind of a tangent, my 4 year old is a big Tucker Barnhart fan. She has a signed picture and card already. We live close to Muncie so we thought we’d get him to sign a ball at Reds Caravan. I’ve done a little research and it seems like everyone recommends getting the official MLB baseball for signatures. Is that what you all would recommend? If we wanted to buy an official ball for Tucker but maybe not for, say, Dmitri Young or Scott Schebler, is there a cheaper but still pretty good alternative? And is there any type of pen you all swear by?
Thanks!
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My advice would be to get the best baseball you can for everybody and use a blue ball point pen- you may not have a choice as they sometimes don't like to switch pens out, but I would avoid blue sharpie on a baseball.
If you don't want to buy an official ball, then just go with what suits your budget.
Donder (01-25-2018),nmculbreth (01-25-2018)
Donder (01-25-2018)
Donder (01-25-2018)
Thanks for all the suggestion. I ended up getting a mini helmet on a stand to have Tucker sign, a mini bat I’ll probably have Schebler sign, an two official MLB baseballs, probably for Marty and Trammel.
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Dom Heffner (01-25-2018)
Eddie Vedder’s tour used microphone and stand- signed.
This was used on Pearl Jam tours from 1998-2005 before he smashed it to hell.
Attachment 13313
dougdirt (02-24-2018)
Renowned Album Cover artist pioneer, Gary Burden, passed away.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Burden
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