Soundgarden- Superunknown 30th Anniversary- Chris Cornell
The late Chris Cornell with a wonderful, charming conversation In he Studio for Soundgarden’s “Superunknown” thirtieth anniversary.
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The late Chris Cornell with a wonderful, charming conversation In he Studio for Soundgarden’s “Superunknown” thirtieth anniversary.
Chris Cornell’s voice singing “Like Suicide”, framed only by a twelve string guitar, makes it seem like only yesterday instead of three decades ago that Soundgarden led us all into the “Superunknown”.
Here on the thirtieth anniversary of Soundgarden’s “Superunknown”, the songs still hit like a ton of bricks…The gifted and sweet singer/co-writer of Soundgarden, the late Chris Cornell, is your host from the In the Studio archives to take us into the “Superunknown” on the album’s thirtieth anniversary the week of March 4.
YES innovated in early 1994 with “Talk”, and singer/lyricist Jon Anderson and singer/guitarist/composer Trevor Rabin joined me In the Studio to talk about “Talk”.
Motley Crue’s Nikki Sixx & Vince Neil In the Studio for “Shout at the Devil” 40th anniversary.
In memoriam : the echoes In the Studio of Neil Peart of Rush, Walter Becker of Steely Dan, Ric Ocasek of The Cars, Paul Barrere of Little Feat, plus David Bowie, Glenn Frey, Chris Squire & Alan White of YES, Chris Cornell. Part two.
In an alternate universe where being boring and predictable is the Original Sin, Vince Neil, Mick Mars, Nikki Sixx, and Tommy Lee of Motley Crue would be sanctified saints, because they have been waging jihad against the tyranny of the mainstream for a full four decades. Peaking at #2 on Billboard Album Sales chart, “Girls, Girls, Girls” would eventually equal their preceding mega-seller “Theatre of Pain” with another four million copies sold. The always eyebrow-raising Nikki Sixx and hilarious Vince Neil are my guests In the Studio for “Girls, Girls, Girls”..
we find out from my guests Cheap Trick lead singer Robin Zander and guitarist/songwriter Rick Nielsen that the band had actually interrupted recording their fourth studio album, “Dream Police” , in order to do that first Japanese tour in 1978. Several hits would eventually come from “Dream Police”, including “Voices”,”It’s the Way of the World”, and the title song, but those would have to wait while Cheap Trick scuttled all plans while they learned to surf the tsunami of success from the unexpected live album.
Way way back to even the eponymous Humble Pie album in 1969 when barely out of his teens, I thought that Peter Frampton‘s lyrical, almost jazzy lead guitar figures set him apart from so many of his less imaginative peers, and it has been a pleasure to watch him refine his chops even while exploring new […]
Redbeard rocks the solar eclipse with this custom playlist!