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1980: Love Live - live, 1978 concert; 1982: Studio / Live - second side live from a 1970 concert; 2003: The Forever Changes Concert; 2003: Electrifically Speaking - Live in Concert; 2003: Back on the Scene - live at My Place, Santa Monica in 1991; 2010: Arthur Lee and Love - Live in Paris 1992; 2015: Coming Through to You: The Live Recording ...
The final official Love album, Reel to Real (1974), was recorded by Lee and session musicians. [32] It features the track "Everybody's Gotta Live", which was previously recorded by Lee for Vindicator. [33] [34] Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, there were various attempts to reunite the original Love lineup.
The 2017 Record Store Day special reissue features the six remained-unreleased songs from the concert, plus "Amoreena" (featured on the 1996 CD). The track listing for the first two sides is the same as the original 1970 release.
Arguably one of the best decades of music, the 1970s saw the rise of disco, long shaggy hair, the continuation of the free love movement, and, of course, Rock and Roll at its height of fame.
Love received a lot of air play in Los Angeles, and performed several times in 1967 at the Cheetah nightclub in Venice, California. [citation needed] Love's music has been described as a mixture of folk-rock, psychedelic rock, baroque pop, Spanish-tinged pop, R&B, garage rock, and even protopunk. Lee has been regarded as "the first punk rocker ...
Love Song was founded in 1970 by Chuck Girard, Tommy Coomes, Jay Truax, and Fred Field, prior to the conversion of any of the band members. [1] Field and Truax were the first two to convert to Christianity and began attending a bible study at Chuck Smith's Calvary Chapel where the other two eventually "accepted Jesus". [1]
All of Me / Live in Concert: Released: 1980; Label: Epic (E2X 36782) ... Love Songs: Released: April 1981; Label: K-Tel (NZ 562) ... 1970 "My Marie" b/w "Our Song (La ...
[6] [7] In the absence of any discussion of the track by Harrison in his 1980 autobiography, [8] commentators have identified "Let It Down" as a sensual love song. [1] [9] [10] Harrison's musical biographer, Simon Leng, describes the lyrics as being among its composer's "most tactile", full of "sexual passion" and "images of sight and touch".