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Year of Sunday is the third album by soft rock duo Seals and Crofts. It was released in 1971 on Warner Bros. Records and was their first record for a major label. Track listing
A few shows featured Jim's sons Joshua on bass guitar and backing vocals and Sutherland on electric guitar. [12] Seals and Crofts were instrumental in both England Dan Seals and John Ford Coley becoming adherents of the Baha'i Faith, [13] although Coley became a Christian some 28 years later. [14] Dan Seals died of cancer in 2009.
The group's roots go back to 1971, [3] when Joe and Lily Isaacs began a bluegrass band. Lily's parents are Polish Jewish Holocaust survivors. A few years after they were liberated from a concentration camp in Germany in 1945, her parents moved two year old Lily to New York City, where, in 1958, she got a recording contract with Columbia Records and started performing in night clubs.
Seals was born in Osceola, Arkansas, where his father, Jim "Son" Seals, owned a small juke joint, called the Dipsy Doodle Club.He began performing professionally by the age of 13, first as a drummer with Robert Nighthawk and later as a guitarist. [4]
Troy Harold Seals (born November 16, 1938, in Bighill, Madison County, Kentucky, United States) [1] is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist. [2]He is a member of the prominent Seals family of pop musicians that includes Jim Seals (of Seals and Crofts), Dan Seals (of England Dan & John Ford Coley), Brady Seals (Little Texas and Hot Apple Pie), and Johnny Duncan. [2]
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Lettin' Go is the final studio album by Son Seals, released in 2000. [5] [6] It was his only album for Telarc.[7]In 2001, at the 22nd W.C. Handy Blues Awards (since 2006 the Blues Music Awards), Lettin' Go was nominated for Blues Album of the Year and Traditional Blues Album of the Year.
I'll Play For You is Seals & Crofts' seventh studio album. The title cut reached #18 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and #4 on the Adult Contemporary charts in the summer of 1975. It was equally successful in Canada (Pop #28, AC #2). [1] [2] It also charted in New Zealand (#30). [3] "Castles in the Sand" also charted in the U.S. and Canada ...