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Originally Posted by Garage Joe:

I think I saw Frank Zappa play the Glasgow Apollo in 1977. I'll have to check that one!

I saw him second time he played there , couple of years later . Well, nearly saw him, lied through my teeth about my age to get served in a pub ( I was just turned 14 ) and got pissed on one martini I remember Dancin Fool and that's about it  

FM
Originally Posted by Slinkiwitch x:
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:

I think I saw Frank Zappa play the Glasgow Apollo in 1977. I'll have to check that one!

I saw him second time he played there , couple of years later . Well, nearly saw him, lied through my teeth about my age to get served in a pub ( I was just turned 14 ) and got pissed on one martini I remember Dancin Fool and that's about it  


I was also there  Here's what you missed....... (Feb 14th)

http://www.setlist.fm/setlist/...otland-43d0e3ab.html

Garage Joe
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:
Originally Posted by Slinkiwitch x:
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:

I think I saw Frank Zappa play the Glasgow Apollo in 1977. I'll have to check that one!

I saw him second time he played there , couple of years later . Well, nearly saw him, lied through my teeth about my age to get served in a pub ( I was just turned 14 ) and got pissed on one martini I remember Dancin Fool and that's about it  


I was also there  Here's what you missed....... (Feb 14th)

http://www.setlist.fm/setlist/...otland-43d0e3ab.html

 ! Cheers Joe! 

FM

Early in the morning of 13 February 1692, in the aftermath of the Glorious Revolution and the Jacobite uprising of 1689 led by John Graham of Claverhouse, a massacre took place in Glen Coe, in the Highlands of Scotland. This incident is referred to as the Massacre of Glencoe, or in Scottish Gaelic Mort Ghlinne Comhann (murder of Glen Coe). The massacre began simultaneously in three settlements along the glen—Invercoe, Inverrigan, and Achnacon—although the killing took place all over the glen as fleeing MacDonalds were pursued. Thirty-eight MacDonalds from the Clan MacDonald of Glencoe were killed by the guests who had accepted their hospitality, on the grounds that the MacDonalds had not been prompt in pledging allegiance to the new monarchs, William and Mary. Another forty women and children died of exposure after their homes were burned.

FM

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