I know of another song like Nights and White Satin or reminds me of it is Lucky Man by Emerson Lake and Palmer.
judy tooley
Ms. Judy :tiphat:
Salutations for you :tiphat::clap::clap::clap::clap:. Lucky Man was the first song, I heard with the ELP. I saw this group in Copenhagen, Denmark after the release of "Pictures at an exibition", originally the title of classical music made by Muzorsky.
Carl Palmer the drummer in ELP, my very first inspiration of huge importance too become a professional drummer, though after listening to him doing the drums for the full show, and shortly after Jack DeJohnette from jazz play the drums, I gave it up.
These two drummers played exactly as I would have played, but I also knew at the time, that I did not have the talents, nor the time nor the patience to become equally to any of these two master drummers IMHO - monster drummers.
Carl Palmer is rather short for psysicals, so during the entire concert, he was not visible to the audience in The Falkoneer Center in Copenhagen. I sat on the bacony. Never in my life before this night, had I seen so many drums and cymbals on a stage, played with such magnificent authority by Carl Palmer.
Funny thing is, Keith Emerson (piano, keyboards, synthesizers) was first educated in classical music on the piano, and first made his name famous with the English band - The Nice - in 1967.
From 1970, when The Nice as a group ended, KE begang working with Greg Lake (el. bass, acoustic guitar and vocals), who came from another great English band King Crimson - a jazz/rock inspired band, and Greg Palmer (drums, percussion) former with the Crazy World Of Arthur Brown, who wrote the satanic song "Fire" - I´ll take you to burn.......
So these three highly talented and more than well playing individual musicians teamed up, and in a very short time in the beginning of the 1970´s became the hottest on the rock/and cross over from classical music - inspired band from England. Of course at the time England was the main generator of all ROCK music, post The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, who had already become international celebreties in ROCK.
Of course Keith Emerson playing "a wall of different keyboards and synthesizers" also were highly active on the stage, throwing his different keyborads around, and screaming at the audience for whatever reason - very exciting show on the stage.