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* The first book to analyse every Queen song - giving equal weight
to album tracks alongside the hits . * Includes analysis of about
20 classic songs using the original 24 track master tapes. * Queen
remain ever popular and active, and continue to tour despite the
death of Freddie Mercury in 1991. This book examines Queen's music,
album by album, track by track, in detail. Where possible, recourse
to the original multi-track master tapes has provided extra
insight. Those familiar hits are revisited, but those classic album
cuts - like `Liar', `March of the Black Queen', `Death on Two
Legs', and `Dragon Attack', `are given equal precedence. The book
also examines the changes that these same four musicians went
through - from heavy and pomp rock to pop as the chart hits began
to flow - with a keen and unbiased eye. Whether as a fan your
preference is for the albums `A Night at the Opera', `Jazz' or
`Innuendo' this detailed and definitive guide will tell you all you
need to know. Queen had strength in depth. These are the songs on
which a legend was built.
Since 1963 Eric Clapton has contributed to two hundred albums by
other artists: from very famous to the obscure and the unexpected:
Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin, The Rolling Stones, Sting, Phil
Collins, Rod Stewart, all four of the Beatles, Martha Velez,
Jonathan Kelly, Corey Hart, Stephen Bishop, Hawkwind, Ray Charles,
Kate Bush, The Tony Rich Project, Toots and the Maytals and Mary J.
Blige. If you've never heard (for instance) 'Beat of the Night' by
Bob Geldof, 'Sexual Revolution' by Roger Waters or 'I Wish It Would
Rain Down' by Phil Collins, this book tells you about Eric's part
in those recordings and many more, as well as his more notorious
collaborations with the likes of The Beatles, Bob Dylan - and Ed
Sheeran! Indeed, this book puts these into context across nearly
sixty years of documented sessions. If you've never delved into
Eric's contributions to other artist's recordings, then this is a
handy guide to help the reader find his way into such a lengthy and
successful second career. If his own albums are the main story,
then these recordings run alongside: an alternative history of one
of rock's most prolific musicians
Music fans tend to divide into two camps at the mention of
Fleetwood Mac. There are those who think of the
multi-million-selling five-piece that formed in the mid-1970s and
released Rumours, the biggest selling album of all time. But there
are those who adopt a self-appointed 'cooler' stance, preferring
the late-sixties blues band fronted by the virtuosic guitarist
Peter Green. But that's not the whole story. Between May 1970, when
Green left his own band to be replaced by the bass player's wife,
to the beginning of 1975, when Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks
joined Fleetwood Mac, there were five years of what can only be
described as turmoil. One by one, talented musicians such as Jeremy
Spencer, Danny Kirwan, Bob Weston and Bob Welch joined and left the
band. While it's impossible to ignore the skill and longevity such
classic songs as 'Rhiannon' and 'Don't Stop' and albums Fleetwood
Mac, Rumours and Tusk, there are an equal number of half-forgotten
classic songs from the first half of the 1970s and many deep album
cuts that have been overlooked. Here is the story of Fleetwood Mac
in the 1970s - the music, the people, the tours, the rumours, the
failures and the successes.
Pink Floyd Song by Song takes a fresh look at the songs which led
to Pink Floyd becoming the third best-selling band of all time.
From 'Arnold Layne' to 'Louder Than Words', Pink Floyd wrote about
anger, isolation, regret, dismay, and fear. These themes, not
always obvious starting points in popular music, were married to a
rare dynamism in rock music. Pink Floyd's most successful period
critically and musically-the eight albums from 1970 to 1983-combine
the pithy lyrics of Roger Waters, the soulful voice and
breath-taking guitar solos of David Gilmour and, until 1979, the
jazz influenced piano and keyboard abilities of the late Richard
Wright. These three together wrote the band's best work, usually in
combinations of twos and threes but also individually. When working
together as equals, the three principals of Pink Floyd were
significantly more than the sum of their individual strengths.
Of all of the 'classic' British rockers who came to prominence in
the 1960s, only a very few have achieved significant, sustained
success through to the present day. A list that comprises Paul
McCartney and The Rolling Stones should also include Eric Clapton.
His critical and commercial accomplishments with John Mayall's
Bluesbreakers, Cream, Blind Faith and his first solo album between
1965 and 1970 was followed the inexplicable failure of the Layla
album, released under the semi-pseudonym of Derek & The
Dominos. Clapton withdrew into heroin addiction for several years.
In 1974, his 'comeback' album, 461 Ocean Boulevard, returned him to
the top three in both the UK and America. Always a strong concert
draw, Clapton has released another sixteen top twenty albums since.
Even 'Layla' returned to the charts in 1982. Eric Clapton Solo
reviews and analyses all of Clapton's studio albums since 1974, as
well as successful collaborations with BB King and JJ Cale. It's
been a long, varied journey: the laid-back rocker of the 1970s; the
commercial sheen of the 1980s; the polished, acoustic yuppie music
and hard blues of the 1990s; the slick R & B stylings of the
2000s and the roots homages of the 2010s. All of this was
underpinned by the skill and talent of Britain's greatest blues
guitarist and a hugely underrated vocalist
In 1973, the Allman Brothers Band were one of the most popular in
America: they headlined the Watkins Glen Summer Jam, attended by an
estimated 600,000 people and their album Brothers and Sisters was a
number one for five weeks on the Billboard listings that summer.
The single 'Ramblin' Man' hit #2 in October. The group made the
cover of Newsweek. Rolling Stone named them 'band of the year'.
Their story can only be described as 'volatile'. Always a strong
live draw since forming in 1969, in the two years prior to Watkins
Glen they had released one of the greatest live albums of all time
and lost two founding members in near-identical motorcycle
accidents, including guitar genius 24-year-old Duane Allman.
Increased drug use and a ruinous 1976 court case forced the band
apart. A three-album reunion between 1978 and 1982 rekindled some
of the old fire, but it was with their twentieth anniversary and
second reformation in 1989 that provided a degree of stability and
acclaim. The passing of founder members Butch Trucks and Gregg
Allman in 2017 definitively ended the band's story. Their legacy of
eleven studio albums, six contemporaneous live albums and several
box sets includes classics such as their self-titled debut, the
sophomore Idlewild South, their artistic and commercial
breakthrough, the definitive live document At Fillmore East and
astounding final album Hittin' The Note from 2003.
The music of Crosby, Stills and Nash, and especially their 1969
self-titled debut album, exemplified the Woodstock generation -
three men, three voices, one common view of freedom and justice.
Their decision to recruit Neil Young before their first public
performance fundamentally altered CSNY the band dynamic. Worldwide
acclaim and success followed: their first three albums, released
1969-1971, have sold almost 30 million copies. In 1974 they
embarked on the biggest stadium tour then attempted, playing
baseball and football stadiums and racetracks across the US to
thousands of fans. They were also pop stars, securing nine top 40
singles between 1969 and 1982. And yet, today, with Neil Young
regarded as a musical legend with a classic back catalogue, his
colleagues Crosby, Stills and Nash remain far less acclaimed. They
comprised Crosby: the drug-addled hippy with weird songs and golden
voice, Stills: the blues man and guitar genius and Nash: the
hard-as-nails balladeer with a strong social conscience. Together,
at their best, they were unbeatable. This book tells you why,
aiming to set things straight, with an album by album analysis of
CSN's five studio albums, as well as the three they made with Neil
Young.
Phil Collins was everywhere in the 1980s. He had more top forty
singles in the US than any other artist during the 1980s: fourteen
as a solo artist and eleven with Genesis, along with two number one
albums. Add to this, twenty-five solo / group hit singles and eight
number one albums in the UK. He also recorded with artists as
diverse as Peter Gabriel, John Martyn, Frida, Robert Plant, Mike
Oldfield, Marti Webb, Al Di Meola, Adam Ant, Eric Clapton, Phil
Bailey, Band Aid, Marilyn Martin, Paul McCartney, Tina Turner,
Chaka Khan and Tears For Fears - another thirty-five albums or
standalone singles, some of which were massive global hits. He also
found time, somehow, to tour with Plant and Clapton in addition to
his extensive in-concert duties with Genesis and as a solo artist.
And perform at Live Aid. At both concerts. That's around six
hundred live concerts in total between 1980 and 1989. There's no
doubt that the guy was busy in that period! Amidst the overwhelming
commercial success and ahead of any other career plan Phil Collins
was and is a musician. His ubiquity between 1980 and 1989 hides ten
years of magnificent music and this book examines Phil Collins'
musical output through these ten tumultuous years.
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Tomorrow, Again
Justin Andrew Wild
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R347
R297
Discovery Miles 2 970
Save R50 (14%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Tomorrow, Again
Justin Andrew Wild
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R558
R474
Discovery Miles 4 740
Save R84 (15%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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