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Michael K. Fell's avatar

Nice read. For me, McCabe was/is the genius of The Verve and an incredible guitarist. The early EPs, 'A Storm in Heaven' and 'A Northern Soul' will always be my favorite albums. Early live videos from the 90s highlight just how intense they were. Shame the egos, mainly Richard's, ripped them apart.

Mark Lanegan is the best example of solo work exceeding the band. As much as I liked The Screaming Trees, Lanegan's solo work is far more creative. It's also more varied and has significantly more depth and artistry than anything the Trees ever produced.

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Shaggy Snodgrass's avatar

I can't imagine you could have this general opinion and "prefer Clapton to Cream", as Cream was miles more energetic and colossal than any other project its members had, except for Ginger Baker's Air Force when he had the Gurwitz brothers in it.

But anyway. "Creative tension" often seems better from outside; but it wears on you over the course of years, the frustration is corrosive and cumulative. I've worked for (regional) "name acts" and groups a lot, and their dynamics internally are different; often the "names" are perfectly fine, it's just that the perception that the previous groups evoked was like amphetamines to critics, and they were super-mad to be deprived of it and took it out on the solo projects. A lot of these "legacy acts" benefit heavily from the collective halo of critical hindsight; even tho' they were a product of time and place, reflected such, and said critics drew meaning and cultural power from interacting with them. Times end, places change; and said writers react to that by pushing Nostalgia (and thereby their own "I Was There" credentials) and denigrating everything else after.

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