Dave Matthews Band- Under the Table and Dreaming 25th Anniversary
Dave Matthews Band “Under the Table and Dreaming” 25th anniversary.
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Dave Matthews Band “Under the Table and Dreaming” 25th anniversary.
“Whipping Post”,”Dreams”, and “Trouble No More” all came from the Allman Brothers Band’s debut album in 1969, which is delightfully documented here by the late Gregg Allman In the Studio.
With the release of the album Darkness on the Edge of Town in 1978, Bruce Springsteen went from the Cinemascope sweep of Born to Run three years earlier to the Rock Generation’s defacto Secretary of Labor.
Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band’s “Nine Tonight” really does feel like a close approximation of seeing the tireless veteran Detroit singer/songwriter and his band when they were one of America’s top live acts. Bob Seger is my terrific guest here In the Studio.
–Gary Rossington, Dale Krantz, Allen Collins interviews conducted by Redbeard May 1980 in a Manhattan hotel room. -Source is analog open reel transferred flat to WAV file. A little noise reduction is the only processing. -Silence gaps are open reel tape leader on master. -For DEMONSTRATION ONLY, not for production. Copyright 2017 BeardedFISCH LLC, cannot […]
Maybe one of the reasons that Bruce Springsteen scored his first #1-seller in 1980 for the double album The River is because he had been road-testing some of the material in concert for years, such as this performance of “Independence Day”in 1978.
This late 1987 interview with The Cult lead guitarist/co-writer Billy Duffy reflects the frustration, duplicated effort, and enormous expense the band incurred making the preceding album, “Electric”, as well as the subsequent success they found with the final results, pointing ahead to the platinum success thirty-five years ago with “Sonic Temple”.
For the golden anniversary of Kiss, lead singer/guitarist/songwriter Paul Stanley told me about the band fraternity of groups with whom they shared the stage some fifty years ago, “The lovefest ended when we hit the stage, because we were there to destroy them.” Gene Simmons agrees, “Putting on the make up was like putting on warpaint.”
focusing on the 1978 release of “Pieces of Eight”, former Styx member and co-founder Dennis DeYoung confesses that, in spite of his major conceptual songwriting role on the band’s 1977 breakthrough three million seller “The Grand Illusion”, the highly-anticipated follow-up “Pieces of Eight” was not his finest hour. Styx guitarists/ songwriters/ singers Tommy Shaw and James Young stepped up creatively to fill the void on “Pieces of Eigh”t, again selling triple platinum with the muscular “Blue Collar Man”,”Renegade”,”The Great White Hope”,”Queen of Spades”, and “Sing for the Day”.
The band Boston had by August 1978 sold seven million copies on its way to becoming the top-selling debut (now over 17 million ), and the follow-up “Don’t Look Back” was being rush released to North American rock radio stations. Boston, led by my guest here in this classic rock interview, guitarist/composer Tom Scholz