Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St. Cecilia and the Gypsy Soul is the ninth studio album by English rock band The Quireboys.It was released by Off Yer Rocka Recordings on 30 March 2015 as part of a four-disc set, including a reissue of the band's album Halfpenny Dancer (2009) and two live discs.
Wardour Street is the first Quireboys album after the band splintered in early 2022. Frontman Spike was fired from the band, leaving Guy Griffin as lead vocalist. [1] [2] In May 2022, Spike announced his reunion with former Quireboys members Guy Bailey, Chris Johnstone, Rudy Richman and Nigel Mogg.
Black Eyed Sons is the eighth studio album by English rock band the Quireboys, released in 2014. The album was released with an unplugged live album records in Sweden and a DVD of a performance in London recorded during the Beautiful Curse tour.
This Is Rock'n'Roll is rock band the Quireboys's third studio album, it is the first album recorded after the band re-united. Their last album before this was recorded in 1993. Their last album before this was recorded in 1993.
The band was formed by Joe Elliott from Def Leppard, London rock drummer Phil Martini, Ronnie Garrity from Raw Glory, and Paul Guerin, Guy Griffin, and Keith Weir from The Quireboys, to open for Mott the Hoople on the last night of the ensemble's tour at London's Hammersmith Apollo in 2009.
Love to Love' is brilliantly written and constructed," observed Quireboys guitarist Guy Griffin. "It has a majesty that makes it world-class. "It has a majesty that makes it world-class. The Quireboys covered it… and when you do that, you get to understand how good the song is."
Principal, Central VPA High School, St. Louis, Missouri: 1997–2004: Jeff Brokamp: Principal, Crest Hills Year-Round School 2004: Mr. Lewis took over the role as Principal. 2004–2006: Clarence Crum: 2006–2007: Jonathan Carlisle: Assistant principal at the former Colonel White High School for the Arts, Dayton, Ohio: 2007-2008: Kimberly S. Brown
Vocalist Jonathan Gray (commonly referred to as just 'Spike') moved from Newcastle upon Tyne to London when he was 17 years old and met guitarist Guy Bailey in a bar. [2]By the mid-1980s, the two decided to form a rock and roll band, the name chosen for the group was originally 'The Choirboys' taken from the 1977 movie of the same name, but they soon changed it to the Queerboys.