Home / Tag Archives: Vol. 1 (page 2)

Tag Archives: Vol. 1

Richard Dyer-Bennett

Vocalist/songwriter Richard Dyer-Bennet was among the primary performers from the folk music renaissance of the first ’40s. A classically educated talent using a pitch-perfect, high lyric tenor, he was also an uncompromising proponent of innovative rights, also founding his very own highly influential 3rd party record label. Delivered Oct 6, …

Read More »

Van Dyke Parks

In a line of business where in fact the term “genius” is passed out freely, Van Dyke Parks may be the real article. Being a program musician, composer, arranger, lyricist, and vocalist, he’s contributed considerably to several years’ value of inimitable masterpieces acknowledged to various other performers, aswell as generating …

Read More »

Los Bukis

The Mexican group Los Bukis, an indigenous word which means “the youngsters,” recorded their debut album in 1975. It included Camilo Sesto’s “Quieres Ser Mi Amante,” a Spanish edition of the traditional “Emotions,” as well as the band’s 1st original strike, “Falso Amor.” The group was created by vocalist/songwriter Marco …

Read More »

Ween

Ween were the best cosmic goof of the choice rock period, a prodigiously talented and deliriously odd duo whose function traveled much beyond the constraints of parody and novelty in to the heart of surrealist ecstasy. Despite a mastery of apparently every mutation from the musical range, the group refused …

Read More »

Wade Bowen

Given birth to and raised in Waco, Tx, vocalist/songwriter Wade Bowen started his music profession in the music group Western world 84 with longtime friend Matt Miller. In 2001, after flirting with the thought of life beyond the music business (he graduated from Tx Tech using a public relations level), …

Read More »

John Bunch

John Number had an extended and distinguished profession even if his abilities as an accompanist and supportive participant sometimes resulted in him being overlooked. He began on piano when he was 11 and within a season was playing in regional clubs. Number, a versatile pianist who was simply most motivated …

Read More »

David Hazeltine

Jazz pianist David Hazeltine was created and raised in Milwaukee, building his professional debut in age group 13 and heading to gig extensively in Chicago and Minneapolis aswell. Serving as the home pianist in the Milwaukee Jazz Gallery, he supported luminaries including Eddie Harris, Sonny Stitt and Chet Baker, the …

Read More »

Rusty Zinn

A, red-haired guitarist using a monster tone and technique that belies his fairly youthful years, Rusty Zinn was raised in the Santa Cruz mountains in northern California. He was launched to traditional R&B through his mother’s assortment of 45 singles, including uncommon discs from Fat Domino and Elvis Presley. While …

Read More »

Los Temerarios

Los Temerarios’ bubblegum ranchera was the intimate soundtrack of an incredible number of Mexican and Mexican-American youths’ lives through the ’90s. Merging components of traditional Mexican ranchera music with keyboards, electrical bass, and stately percussion, they made a audio whose appeal often took these to the very best tier of …

Read More »

Twiztid

Protégés from the Insane Clown Posse and signed to the group’s Psychopathic label, the Detroit-area rap duo Twiztid based their action on the similarly theatrical, outrageous, makeup-heavy picture and an obsession with serial-killer horror movies. Jamie Madrox as well as the Monoxide Kid ensemble themselves as psychotic axe murderers on …

Read More »