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Wind - Dear Little Friend 1971

Wind 1971 is:

Leistner, Steve - vocals, flute
Leidenberger, Thomas - guitar, vocals
Büeler, Andreas - bass
Büeler, Lucian - keyboards
Schmidt, Lucky - drums, percussion, mellotron

Webseite:
http://www.trick-music.de/steve_leistner.htm

Webside english:
http://www.alexgitlin.com/npp/wind.htm

Live-Bilder von 1971 in Koblenz:
http://www.krautrockseite.de/gallery45.htm
http://www.krautrockseite.de/kblnz1971.htm

Wind war eine deutsche Formation aus dem fränkischen Erlangen, die in den Jahren 1971 und 1972 die beiden Alben "Seasons" und "Morning" veröffentlicht hat. Nach dem rockigen Erstling orientierten sich die jungen Musiker auf ihrem zweiten Werk in harmonischere Gefilde im Fahrwasser der Briten The Moody Blues. In der kurzen Zeit ihres Bestehens brachte es die Band auch durchaus zu einigem Ansehen und trat im Rahmen ihrer ausgedehnten Liveaktivitäten sogar zusammen mit Pink Floyd vor über 100.000 Zuschauern auf. Nach der Single "Josephine" löste sich die Band auf. Die intensive Präsenz auf den deutschen Bühnen verschlang für damalige Verhältnisse immense Summen und konnte nicht mit den bescheidenen Gagen ausgeglichen werden, weshalb die Band zum Zeitpunkt ihrer Auflösung vor dem finanziellen Ruin stand.
(Quelle: www.babyblaue-seiten.de)

Musicians Steve Leistner (vocals), Thomas Leidenberger (guitar, vocals), Andreas Bueler (bass), Lucian Bueler (keyboards) and Lucky Schmidt (drums, percussion, mellotron) started their recording career with an album of cover versions as Corporal Gander's Fire Dog Brigade: "On The Rocks" (1970). It was recorded before Leistner joined and they adopted the name Wind. In 1971, they recorded the legendary album, "Seasons" - one of the most sought-after German albums nowadays. This was the second of three releases on the budget-priced Plus label. This varied album captured Wind in different moods: "Dear Little Friend" was a thundering heavy rocker and "What Do We Do Now" - a vintage progressive rock anthem with fine use of organ and flute. "Romance" is a charming interlude for piano and "Now It's Over" had melancholic, folky vibes like Pink Floyd circa 1969. "Springwind" had haunting vocal lines, and finally came the 15-minute closing track, "Red Morningbird" with its floating, moody folk whispering, interrupted by some outrageously heavy outbursts. This is one of the classics of German progressive rock that will always be remembered for its powerful Hammond organ dueling with electric guitar sound; it should appeal both to fans of progressive heavy rock and those of folk-rock, as performed by the artists on the Pilz label.

The second album, "Morning" had a different, folky and lyrical fairy-tale atmosphere. The opening track "Morning Song" sounded almost like Procol Harum! "The Princess And The Minstrel" (also released as a 33 rpm single with "Schlittenfart" as the B-side!) was a long, partly spoken tale. "Dragon's Maid", "Carnival" and "Tommy's Song" could be compared to the legendary British group Spring, with their soft mellotron textures. This was another very good album, although I'm not sure it would appeal to the same audience as their first album.

After one further 1973 single ("Josephine" coupled with "Puppet Master"), Wind's relationship with CBS ended.

Albums:
Seasons - 1971 Plus 3, reissued by Second Battle on CD, SB 016
Morning - 1972 CBS 65007, reissued by Green Tree on CD, TM9302

Taken from Cosmic Dreams at Play - A guide to German Progressive and Electronic Rock by Dag Erik Asbjørnsen, Borderline Productions, ISBN 1-899855-01-7


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