Talk:SRC (band)
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Rewrite
[edit]Just found this article at random. it needs massive rewrite and references. i will check the external links to see if they can be considered references, but i will trim some of the more obscure details not appropriate for an encyclopedia article of a band of this stature. the tone is also way too informal. i notice a band member has added material. please, if i have changed or removed material that you feel is notable, add it back with references. if you dont know how to add refs, you can just cut and paste urls here, and say what you want added back. if the reference is a book or cd copy, indicate the book/cd title and release info, and i can format it (its easy unless you are really new here). i may still disagree about adding it back, but i hopefully wont be arbitrary or biased against the band. i am not familiar with this band, but thats not required to be able to edit here, just good editing guidelines and a general knowledge of how to write for WP, which i do have. and i will seek out the music at some point, as i probably will like it.Mercurywoodrose (talk) 16:45, 6 September 2009 (UTC)
- SRC performed at the first Earth Day at U-M Stadium. I was there. 96.42.152.122 (talk) 19:33, 4 November 2022 (UTC)
- So were lots of other folks, so you are right, this belongs on the talk page not in the article. Carptrash (talk) 19:45, 4 November 2022 (UTC)
The bassist's full name is Peter Robin Dale. He's an interesting character, he grew up in Taiwan as the son of Christian missionaries. He became an import/export mogul for the Chinese in Hong Kong, and wrote a protest song (regarding the Tiananmen Square incidents) called "China We Hear You Call" which cost him his job and got him in some hot water with the Chinese government. There was a Seattle Times article about him in the early 2000's or maybe late '90's, which is where I read about all this. Fascinating story. Nebulousdawn (talk) 09:08, 23 November 2015 (UTC)
Improper link
[edit]I just want to point out that the link to "The Tymes" is directed to an article about the Philly soul group, and not the Kalamazoo band "The Thyme", which is the band that played the Grande Ballroom. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Spidergawd (talk • contribs) 22:51, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
Bad Information
[edit]E. G. Clawson was NOT a stage name. His birth Name was Elmer and he didn't like it so he just used his initials. Graduated in 1964 from Bloomfield Hills Brother Rice High School. He never resided in Portersville, California. Always lived in Michigan - Bloomfield Hills, Rochester, possibly other cities in the area. After his venture in the music business, he worked as a superintendent for the general contractor Walbridge, Aldinger in the Detroit area. He died July 23, 2003.
I worked with him from the mid about 1978 to the mid 1980s on a few different projects DetroitBob (talk) 02:41, 24 April 2024 (UTC)