Home / Tag Archives: 1970s – 1980s (page 22)

Tag Archives: 1970s – 1980s

Taxi Girl

Taxi Female was formed in Paris in the later ’70s around Daniel Darc (vocals), Mirwais (electric guitar), Laurent Sinclair (keyboards), Stéphane Erard (bass), and Pierre Wolfsohn (drums). The music group played straight alongside such renowned works as Marquis de Sade in the French ’80s cult rings club. Mainly inspired by …

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Modern Eon

Just like the better-known Teardrop Explodes and Echo & the Bunnymen, the post-punk band Modern Eon was located in Liverpool, Britain. Fitting somewhere within the unusual rhythms and textured turmoil from the Comsat Angels as well as the intense aspect of Sad Enthusiasts and Giants, the music group released only …

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Chicago Gangsters

Despite their name, the Chicago Gangsters were originally from Ohio, comprising brothers James, Sam, Chris, and Leroy McCants. Their audio ranged from weighty funk and disco to nice, smooth spirit balladry. They used the name Chicago Gangsters after getting on using the Platinum Dish label, where they caused prolific songwriter/arranger …

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Princess

Vocalist Princess sang with Osibisa in the ’70s before touring being a history vocalist with many artists, included in this Evelyn Thomas and Precious Wilson. She was agreed upon as a single work to Supreme Information, where the creation team of Share, Aitken & Waterman got her some British strikes. …

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Juke Jumpers

The Juke Jumpers experienced numerous changes in its lineup, and its own membership by no means stabilized for very long periods. When the Fort Well worth music group was first founded in 1977, it had been made up of guitarist Sumter Bruton, vocalist and bassist Jim Colgrove, drummer Mike Buck, …

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The Green Arrows

A six-piece Zimbabwean group with a unique three-guitar attack, the Green Arrows were anchored by brothers Zexie Manatsa (bass and business lead vocals) and Stanley Manatsa (business lead acoustic guitar), and by the mid-’70s these were arguably the main music group in South Africa. Shaped in the middle-’60s as the …

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Tom Delaney

The clarinetist Tom Delaney is among the credited sessionmen on tracks recorded by singer and songwriter Hoyt Axton in the first ’80s. He’s no regards to the blues songwriter from the same name who passed away in the ’60s, apart from the actual fact that he most likely practiced the …

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Bob Davis

Bob Davis is an associate of the pupil orchestra which recorded avant-garde composer Anthony Braxton’s “Structure Zero. 96” in the first ’80s. Davis, who performed the double-reed British horn upon this performance, shouldn’t be confused using a multi-instrumentalist from the same name through the ’20s and ’30s who done many …

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Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux

Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux is remembered seeing that much on her behalf modern classical and electro-acoustic functions for her initiatives to carve a distinct segment for ladies in the male-dominated music establishments from the 1970s and 1980s. The Quebecer passed away in her forties of the human brain tumor before she …

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Faithful Breath

Although they probably qualify as you of Germany’s extremely oldest rock and roll bands (with origins dating back again to the past due ’60s!), the strangely called Faithful Breathing didn’t become recognized to worldwide audiences before middle-’80s, when, like their a lot more popular countrymen, the Scorpions, they obtained some …

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