Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Undead is a live album by Ten Years After, recorded at the small jazz club Klooks Kleek in London on 14 May 1968, and released in July of that year. The show combined blues, boogie and jazz playing that merged more traditional rock and roll with 1950s-style jump blues.
In 1968, after touring Scandinavia and the United States, they released a second LP, the live album Undead, with a first version of the noteworthy song "I'm Going Home". [8] They followed this in February 1969 with the studio issue Stonedhenge , a British hit that included another well-known track, "Hear Me Calling", which was released as a ...
Title Album details Peak chart positions CAN [3]DEN [4]US [10]Double Deluxe: Released: 1970; Label: Deram; Formats: 2xLP; Japan-only release — — — Alvin Lee and Company
Believing that the group's live album Undead (1968) had already perfectly captured their talents, frontman and guitarist Alvin Lee conceived Stonedhenge as a change in direction. A psychedelic blues album, it expands the group's boogie rock sound into more experimental territory, incorporating jazz , progressive pop and musique concrète styles ...
Pages in category "1968 live albums" The following 48 pages are in this category, out of 48 total. ... Undead (Ten Years After album) W. Wheels of Fire; Y. Yale Concert
Undead (Six Feet Under album), 2012; Undead (Tad Morose album), or the title song, 2000; Undead (Ten Years After album), 1968 "Undead" (Hollywood Undead song), 2008 "Undead" (Yoasobi song), 2024 "Undead", a song by the Haunted from The Haunted, 1998 "Undead", a song by Sadus from Illusions, 1988; The Undead, an American horror punk band, or a ...
Ten Years After is the debut album by English blues rock band Ten Years After. Recorded at Decca Studios in London in September 1967, and released on 27 October 1967, it was one of the first blues rock albums by British musicians.
The 1968 Billboard year-end list is composed of records that entered the Billboard Hot 100 during November–December 1967 (only when the majority of chart weeks were in 1968), January to November–December 1968 (majority of chart weeks in 1968). Records with majority of chart weeks in 1967 or 1969 are included in the year-end charts for those ...