Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Best of Faces — 2012 Stay With Me: The Faces Anthology (including two previously unreleased live tracks) — 2015 1970-1975: You Can Make Me Dance, Sing or Anything (Box set compiling the band's four studio albums, previously unreleased studio tracks and a bonus disc of rarities) 80 2018 An Introduction to : Faces — "—" denotes ...
Included for the first time is one track from the Faces' final session, "Open to Ideas." With the exception of a cover of Bob Dylan 's " The Wicked Messenger ," all of these tracks appear, alongside many others, on the comprehensive 2004 four-disc box set by the group (again curated by keyboardist Ian Mclagan) titled Five Guys Walk into a Bar... .
The First, the Best and the Last (1980) The Punk Singles Collection 1977–80 (1998) Angels With Dirty Faces 2-CD Anthology (1999) (Castle Music ESDCD 780) Laced Up Boots and Corduroys (2000) If The Kids Are United - The Best of Sham 69 (2001) The Best of Sham 69: Cockney Kids Are Innocent (2002) The Complete Collection: 3-disc (2004)
Love and loss are hard concepts to face, but Charlotte and Wilbur do it so very gracefully. Read E.B. White's childhood masterpiece together, and keep a box of tissues at the ready. Ages 8-12
Anthology TV series have a way of keeping us on our toes! The Twilight Zone and Lawmen Bass Reeves are good options. Here are the best anthology series to stream in 2024.
"Stay with Me" is a song by English rock band Faces, written jointly by lead singer Rod Stewart and guitarist Ronnie Wood. Released from the band's third studio album A Nod Is As Good As a Wink... to a Blind Horse (1971), it became their only major hit in the United States, although they had a further three Top 20 singles in the UK chart.
Target "It might feel obvious, but Target is the absolute best source for kids' clothes. They have cute, on-trend patterns and cuts (hello cropped joggers) but at a price point that makes it fine ...
Coast to Coast: Overture and Beginners is a 1974 live album credited to Rod Stewart/Faces. [1] Stewart's practice was not giving concerts as a solo act at the time, but rather appearing jointly with the Faces, thus the dual crediting.