Of all the questions posed by pop music over the years — Will you love me tomorrow? Should I stay or should I go? — among the toughest is this: When is a famous band no longer itself?
Reminds me of that time in the early-70s when David Bowie was swooning backstage while meeting The Velvet Underground, only to be informed a little later that he’d been talking to Doug Yule, who replaced John Cale then took over as frontman when Lou Reed quit the band, and if I’m not mistaken with the timeline, even guitarist Sterling Morrison and drummer Moe Tucker had already also split.
Reminds me of that time in the early-70s when David Bowie was swooning backstage while meeting The Velvet Underground, only to be informed a little later that he’d been talking to Doug Yule, who replaced John Cale then took over as frontman when Lou Reed quit the band, and if I’m not mistaken with the timeline, even guitarist Sterling Morrison and drummer Moe Tucker had already also split.