I remember Frumpy ( from Hamburg) performing live in my home town headlining a festival in 1973. I had met the organiser just the week before who hired me as an Usher. Frumpy opened for some important bands in the US and met great receptivity there on their tours, but then their rcords were not in the stores which is a pity.
Inga Rumpf had some powerful vocals. Pity the early 1970s German prog-psych rock band with songs like "The Gipsy Was Born," "Duty" and "Morning" wasn't more popular. Perhaps, Inga wasn't talking about her "Humps" like Fergie and the Black Eyed Peas or "Buttons" like the Pussycat Dolls. "Oh well," as Peter Green would say.
Stimmt. Hey Uwe, hier ist einer meiner favorisierten songs: th-cam.com/video/EN4ANI88xFQ/w-d-xo.html, ich mag besonders diesen "schlendernden, behäbigen" Grund-groove, der im ersten Teil besonders gut vernehmbar ist. Damals konnte ich mit der Orgel im Rock nix anfangen, aber bei Frumpy hat sie mich überhaut nicht gestört. Apropos Orgel, das georgel beim Gitarrensolo nervt mich ein wenig, für meinen Geschmack hätten die Frumpys eine andere Gitarre nehmen sollen, oder einen Effekt, oder beides. Ich frage mal, wäre ein wärmerer Klang und ein etwas integrierteres Solo evtl. noch song-dienlicher? LIEBEn Gruß
The term was popularized by British music journalists, who adopted the term "Krautrock" as a humorous umbrella-label for the diverse German scene, though many so-labelled artists disliked the term. Core influences on these German artists included bands such as the Mothers of Invention, the Velvet Underground, the Beatles and Pink Floyd. A significant influence was the late '60s albums of jazz musician Miles David. Moving away from the patterns of song structure and melody of much rock music in America and Britain, some in the movement were drawn to a more mechanical and electronic sound. Krautrock has proven to be highly influential on a succession of other musical styles and developments. Early contemporary enthusiasts outside Germany included Hawkwind and Julian Cope who has always cited krautrock as an influence, and wrote the book Krautrocksampler on the subject - suggesting, "Krautrock is a subjective British phenomenon", based on the way the music was received in the UK rather than on the actual West German music scene out of which it grew). The genre also had a strong influence on David Bowie’s 1976 album, Station to Station and the experimentation it inspired led to his “Berlin Trilogy”. Krautrock was also highly influential on the late-'70s development of British new wave and post-punk, notably artists such as Siouxsie and the Banshees, Public Image Ltd, Cabaret Voltaire, The Fall, Gary Numan, Joy Division, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark and Simple Minds. Kraftwerk in particular had a lot of influence on American electronic dance music of the 1980s: Electro, House, Techno and especially Goa Trance.
Like a library... All great knowledge and lots of it ! Be good to go down the list of mentions to delight of the multiple genres you've mentioned 👍. THANKS, really 😁
@@DerEchteBold Well, it reads like the typical shallow description of Krautrock you'll likely find on Wikipedia or Encyclopædia Britannica. Not one single original thought, just the usual song and dance.
Best Frumpy song ever- my taste- is "How the Gypsy was born". That Hammond sounds brutal when I heard it for the first time. Kicked me right into another dimension.
Just in case anybody thought this was live, this is unfortunately a lip-synched performance of a studio recording from their debut album. The debut album was recorded before the guitarist joined the band, so you can see Rainer Baumann miming guitar notes that don't exist in the song.
Eine der größten Stimmen, die es jemals in Deutschland (und darüber hinaus) gegeben hat. Wie viele berühmte Bands aus dieser Zeit müssten sich hinter Frumpy anstellen.
In a similar, & i think better, vein is Brian Auget & the Trinity, featuring Julie Driscoll. Brian is B-3 Master, & Julies voice is incredible. They also cover Indian Rope Man, The Flesh Failures ( from Hair ) & Light My Fire. Also Brian Augers Oblivion Expresss ( instrumental trio ).
love this - nearest thing clearly is julie driscoll/bian auger/trinity - but very different (but equally good) singers united by great organ backing.....
A great version of a great Richie Havens track from a great album "All will be changed" . Frumpy were an excellent band with a fine vocalist in lnga Rumph . Check out "Frumpy 2" where on the four long tracks the band stretch out and show what a fine band they were .
I agree with (the only comments I read) that the singer had a different sound and looks like some other folks think it is great. Obviously 60's stuff, when I was in my teens. Maybe those liking this are of a similar age as I. Hey it's good to have you all around young and old...
If you've heard of FRUMPY and Inga Rumpf for the first time here - go to How The Gipsy Was Born (Live 1971). It was one of the greatest songs in the early 70s, and a hit. We almost crawled into the radio back then (behind the Iron Curtain). From minute 4:56 and 7:10 you could freak out...
I remember well that according to the critics of that era a distinctive attribute of Krautrock was the lack of vibe and swing of most German drummers. Their drumming used to be on the leady side.
Yeah, I think calling this "Krautrock" is too limiting and pigeonholing as opposed to simply calling it some excellent Progressive rock. The British and American bands had no exclusive claim on that term, and German bands, as well as those of many other nationalities were very diverse and merely lacked the promotion and distribution enjoyed by the British and American bands.
Yes you make a good point but progressive music was very much a British genre and set the standard for those European and American outfits. When you consider the wide variety of progressive rock from the likes of King Crimson,Genesis, Yes, ELP, through to Third Ear Band, Edgar Broughton and Rare Bird and onto Van Der Graff Generator, Focus and Traffic these bands were the pioneers and IMO produced the finest of the genre.
I dont consider Frumpy progressive rock. Heavy rock with progtendecies when you listen to their full albums. Great cover version my faveis still Jullie Driscoll with Brian Anger.
This song featured on an album by ‘Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger and the Trinity’. It was fantastic. The original was by Richie Havens. This was a good cover too.
This is a great number, Indian rope man,,I have a different version of the song by Julie Driscoll and Brian auger and the trinity from the album "streetnoise " both versions are good.
I'd never heard of them before, but that voice......amazing 😍 to be honest I wasn't even sure at first if she was singing in English or German but she's singing Fog dangling thick Can't see the right road Streets are sick, The eight day mill It might grind slow, but it grinds fine Indian rope man, while lookin' on Tells common clay he's heavenly born Retired layman looks on in scorn, With a transplanted heart Kiss him quick, he has to part. Yeah... yeah Indian rope man sees the times, Splitting loose the edge of minds Catching losers in his line, in his line, yeah Kiss him quick, he has to part. Yeah... yeah Indian rope man flexes his eye, Dissolving the fog Revealing the lie Indian rope man holds my trick in his heart, yeah Kiss him quick, he has to part Yeah... yeah Indian rope man sees all strife Cutting down eternal life When his soul transcends his heart, oh Kiss him quick, he has to part. Yeah... yeah
Danke Frumpy, danke Inga! Eure Musik war und ist der Hammer! Das geht noch immer in Herz und Seele!❤
Inga Rumpf was the voice in this Time in Germany !!
Not trying to be offensive, but was she trans?
that voice...effortless... now on my list of favorites I've ever heard.
Where have they been all my life?
Never heard of Frumpy until the YT recommendation, which for once was good un
True, this band is amazing.
i can't believe I never heard this before tonight! What a cool tune!
th-cam.com/video/jvA62El_I9M/w-d-xo.html
Same
Same.
Julie driscoll and the trinity sings it a hundred times better ❤
Not forgetting Brian Auger with his son and daughter :)@@lesleyscott938
Inga was incredible as a natural talent, the band just showcased how good she was with their musical prowess.
Was für eine tolle Band und was für eine grandiose Sängerin mit einer wahnsinnig ausdrucksvollen Stimme. ❤❤❤
This band had a great sound. And her voice really has it. They sound like they could have done a James Bond theme back then.
SHE WAS GORGEOUS. 💖
And she had a great voice!
Is gorgeous
Saw Frumpy many years ago at the Lyceum in London supporting Steamhammer. Loved them 😊
Now Steamhammer were a fantastic band and so wish I had seen them
I remember Frumpy ( from Hamburg) performing live in my home town headlining a festival in 1973. I had met the organiser just the week before who hired me as an Usher. Frumpy opened for some important bands in the US and met great receptivity there on their tours, but then their rcords were not in the stores which is a pity.
Inga Rumpf had some powerful vocals. Pity the early 1970s German prog-psych rock band with songs like "The Gipsy Was Born," "Duty" and "Morning" wasn't more popular. Perhaps, Inga wasn't talking about her "Humps" like Fergie and the Black Eyed Peas or "Buttons" like the Pussycat Dolls. "Oh well," as Peter Green would say.
I think German bands were always supressed a little back in the day.
Never heard of this song or the group - but great song and WOW , what a voice.
th-cam.com/video/EN4ANI88xFQ/w-d-xo.html LIEBEn Gruß
They have some more great songs, esp. on their 2nd album, "Frumpy 2".
They were created by AI two years ago.
What an amazing voice❤❤❤
Fantastisch, Inga Rumpf. Es muß nicht immer "How The Gipsy Was Born" sein. Toll
Stimmt. Hey Uwe, hier ist einer meiner favorisierten songs: th-cam.com/video/EN4ANI88xFQ/w-d-xo.html, ich mag besonders diesen "schlendernden, behäbigen" Grund-groove, der im ersten Teil besonders gut vernehmbar ist.
Damals konnte ich mit der Orgel im Rock nix anfangen, aber bei Frumpy hat sie mich überhaut nicht gestört.
Apropos Orgel, das georgel beim Gitarrensolo nervt mich ein wenig, für meinen Geschmack hätten die Frumpys eine andere Gitarre nehmen sollen, oder einen Effekt, oder beides. Ich frage mal, wäre ein wärmerer Klang und ein etwas integrierteres Solo evtl. noch song-dienlicher? LIEBEn Gruß
Wow, what a great song! The voice is fantastic!
Bluesy & psychedelic. The band is cooking ! Fantastic find, thank you for posting.
❤
This deserves millions of views
Frumpy was Awesome with this lineup.
If i was a male groupie back in 71... Inga would've fucking destroyed me!
Dreams are good!
I' would have loved being destroyed by Inga ! haha , had a massive crush on here for decades and that voice , oh man.
Bin 66Jahre und habe diese Zeit genossen und heute noch auf Festivals und Konzerten unterwegs.Inga war mein Traum früher.
I'd never heard of Frumpy before stumbling upon this. I've heard Brian Auger do this song a number of times.
The term was popularized by British music journalists, who adopted the term "Krautrock" as a humorous umbrella-label for the diverse German scene, though many so-labelled artists disliked the term. Core influences on these German artists included bands such as the Mothers of Invention, the Velvet Underground, the Beatles and Pink Floyd. A significant influence was the late '60s albums of jazz musician Miles David. Moving away from the patterns of song structure and melody of much rock music in America and Britain, some in the movement were drawn to a more mechanical and electronic sound.
Krautrock has proven to be highly influential on a succession of other musical styles and developments. Early contemporary enthusiasts outside Germany included Hawkwind and Julian Cope who has always cited krautrock as an influence, and wrote the book Krautrocksampler on the subject - suggesting, "Krautrock is a subjective British phenomenon", based on the way the music was received in the UK rather than on the actual West German music scene out of which it grew). The genre also had a strong influence on David Bowie’s 1976 album, Station to Station and the experimentation it inspired led to his “Berlin Trilogy”.
Krautrock was also highly influential on the late-'70s development of British new wave and post-punk, notably artists such as Siouxsie and the Banshees, Public Image Ltd, Cabaret Voltaire, The Fall, Gary Numan, Joy Division, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark and Simple Minds. Kraftwerk in particular had a lot of influence on American electronic dance music of the 1980s: Electro, House, Techno and especially Goa Trance.
You summed it all perfectly and I totally agree with you😉
Like a library...
All great knowledge and lots of it !
Be good to go down the list of mentions to delight of the multiple genres you've mentioned 👍.
THANKS, really 😁
@@johnnyp8979 Dude, it's just copy & paste from Wikipedia.
@@eaglebauer944
Why do you think that?
@@DerEchteBold Well, it reads like the typical shallow description of Krautrock you'll likely find on Wikipedia or Encyclopædia Britannica. Not one single original thought, just the usual song and dance.
Never heard of this band until today.😮
Very cool 😎 reminds me of Curved Air.
Same here.
Best Frumpy song ever- my taste- is "How the Gypsy was born". That Hammond sounds brutal when I heard it for the first time. Kicked me right into another dimension.
Fantastic
The voice
👍👍👍👍👍👍👏👏👏👏
What a great version and the singing WOW!
Digging the “Indian rope man” song and music. Cool first time hearing and seeing this. Life is…great❤
“Frumpy” ……I love it.
こんなに目が覚めるようなロックは久しぶり凄い😮
Just in case anybody thought this was live, this is unfortunately a lip-synched performance of a studio recording from their debut album. The debut album was recorded before the guitarist joined the band, so you can see Rainer Baumann miming guitar notes that don't exist in the song.
Surprised this wasn't a hit. Cool song, great singing, and solid hooks.
Inga canta demais e tem uma incrível voz. Maravilhosa música.
Inga's voice is the coolest.
Eine der größten Stimmen, die es jemals in Deutschland (und darüber hinaus) gegeben hat. Wie viele berühmte Bands aus dieser Zeit müssten sich hinter Frumpy anstellen.
Great voice ❤
The greatest female voice of rock n roll history!!!!!!!
Tremenda banda, ótimo vocal . Já os conhecia a um bom tempo !💯👍👏👏👏👏
What a freaking amazimg voice.
In a similar, & i think better, vein is Brian Auget & the Trinity, featuring Julie Driscoll. Brian is B-3 Master, & Julies voice is incredible. They also cover Indian Rope Man, The Flesh Failures ( from Hair ) & Light My Fire. Also Brian Augers Oblivion Expresss ( instrumental trio ).
Yeh there’s quite a few Brian Auger & Julie Driscoll videos elsewhere on this channel
love this - nearest thing clearly is julie driscoll/bian auger/trinity - but very different (but equally good) singers united by great organ backing.....
Bella Inga, the definitive hippy-freak-rocker girl ❤️
Absolutely!
Not a hippy freak. A Rocker, yes.
Amazing voice and the band, to the perfection.
@@pressureworks of course😉
A great version of a great Richie Havens track from a great album "All will be changed" . Frumpy were an excellent band with a fine vocalist in lnga Rumph . Check out "Frumpy 2" where on the four long tracks the band stretch out and show what a fine band they were .
Amazing voice!
Awesome music. 👏👏👏👏
Sound mind,Sound body,Sound City
She sounds like Ozzy
Tanks for sharing. ✨👨🎨🎨👍🏻✨
Excellent - I only knew the Bob Marley version
❤..toller Song ❤❤❤Danke ❤❤❤
This song is so good to hear it and i don't get bored. To listen to it and to listen to it.....
thanks for the upload! love this song
Great isn't it. If you've not heard other versions of this song, they're elsewhere on this channel or here facebook.com/OrganizedRod
Wow, I haven't heard frumpy since the 70's or 80's maybe. Great progressive rock and roll. Thank you.
Wow - great band and amazing voice - I would guess it's from the early 70th because of the dressing and music style.
Excelente Frumpy tambie Inga....suba mas videos Sr!!!
Love this. Nice
Beautiful ! What a Star !!
Очень и очень даже,мои 60-70-е.
I am loving me some Inga!
I agree with (the only comments I read) that the singer had a different sound and looks like some other folks think it is great. Obviously 60's stuff, when I was in my teens. Maybe those liking this are of a similar age as I. Hey it's good to have you all around young and old...
You may want to check out their "Singing Songs"...!
btw, singer Inga Rumpf is still performing!
50 years late but I finally discovered Inga. Nice!
War das etwa Graham Bonney det die Ansage gemacht hat? Trucky.
Been a big fan of the Driscoll/Auger/Trinity version for ages, but not seen this clip before. Interesting arrangement. Thanks a lot.
Outstanding! No Joke
Eine feine Erinnerung an die 70er mit Inga Rumpf❤
If you've heard of FRUMPY and Inga Rumpf for the first time here - go to How The Gipsy Was Born (Live 1971). It was one of the greatest songs in the early 70s, and a hit. We almost crawled into the radio back then (behind the Iron Curtain). From minute 4:56 and 7:10 you could freak out...
Здорово 👍
Génial ça joue fantastique époque
Os anos 70 deixou muita saudade. Isso é muito diferenciado.
Jean Jacques Kravetz was a fantastic organ player
Still is
I remember well that according to the critics of that era a distinctive attribute of Krautrock was the lack of vibe and swing of most German drummers. Their drumming used to be on the leady side.
Yes that particular drum sound was typified by the German band, Can
This was good rock music!
First time I've ever heard of them or this song. Its all great.
🌟🎶🔥🎶🌟 Great !! Thank you.
How has this escaped me all these years? WOW.
There is something "sugarman" about this song. Coincidence or not its a pretty good tune!
Damn. this is the first time I've heard of this band... Singer absolutely SLAYS it! JEEZUS!
So beautiful and today she's just as gorgeous
Yeah, I think calling this "Krautrock" is too limiting and pigeonholing as opposed to simply calling it some excellent Progressive rock. The British and American bands had no exclusive claim on that term, and German bands, as well as those of many other nationalities were very diverse and merely lacked the promotion and distribution enjoyed by the British and American bands.
Yes you make a good point but progressive music was very much a British genre and set the standard for those European and American outfits. When you consider the wide variety of progressive rock from the likes of King Crimson,Genesis, Yes, ELP, through to Third Ear Band, Edgar Broughton and Rare Bird and onto Van Der Graff Generator, Focus and Traffic these bands were the pioneers and IMO produced the finest of the genre.
Id argue the opposite, this is far too poppy for the term krautrock. More like prog pop.
Just call it music
I think labeling this Progressive Rock. is far to limiting and pigeonholing.
I dont consider Frumpy progressive rock. Heavy rock with progtendecies when you listen to their full albums. Great cover version my faveis still Jullie Driscoll with Brian Anger.
It is always so interesting how the time the music was made can be heard from the style . I am guessing this was early 1970's
Первый раз такую группу вижу (классно играют)!
...adore that hammond !!! and kravetz obviously knows how to handle it..
Love this!
Wow. Überragend. Noch nie gehört.
Progressive, with an almost Dusty Springfield-like voice! Original..
A wilder Dusty, I'd say.
@@omiluna7362 definitely!
What a tune man, get in!.
This song featured on an album by ‘Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger and the Trinity’. It was fantastic. The original was by Richie Havens. This was a good cover too.
Her voice is awesome!
This is a great number, Indian rope man,,I have a different version of the song by Julie Driscoll and Brian auger and the trinity from the album "streetnoise " both versions are good.
I'd never heard of them before, but that voice......amazing 😍
to be honest I wasn't even sure at first if she was singing in English or German but she's singing
Fog dangling thick
Can't see the right road
Streets are sick,
The eight day mill
It might grind slow, but it grinds fine
Indian rope man, while lookin' on
Tells common clay he's heavenly born
Retired layman looks on in scorn,
With a transplanted heart
Kiss him quick, he has to part.
Yeah... yeah
Indian rope man sees the times,
Splitting loose the edge of minds
Catching losers in his line, in his line, yeah
Kiss him quick, he has to part.
Yeah... yeah
Indian rope man flexes his eye,
Dissolving the fog
Revealing the lie
Indian rope man holds my trick in his heart, yeah
Kiss him quick, he has to part
Yeah... yeah
Indian rope man sees all strife
Cutting down eternal life
When his soul transcends his heart, oh
Kiss him quick, he has to part.
Yeah... yeah
Fantastic! 👍🏻
It's a cover of a Ritchie Havens song.
I love this sound
Godamn. Excellent vocals.
What a voice!
1 of germanys roses!
Vintage rock is so good,yeahh,I like it
Wow! Incredible!
I didn't know the girl from Wet Leg was in a prog band? ;)
Beautiful Woman