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The Globe and Mail determined that "Outrider is a mixed bag, ripe with snakelike blues riffs and Page's impeccable use of textures, but hampered by mediocre songwriting." [12] Years later, Jimmy Page reflected on the album in rather positive terms: Outrider's all right. It's demo-like compared with those overproduced albums that came out at the ...
Jimmy Page is a British rock musician, best known as the guitarist and producer for English rock band Led Zeppelin. He has also participated in numerous solo and group projects since Led Zeppelin disbanded in 1980.
Page's musical tastes included skiffle (a popular English music genre of the time) and acoustic folk playing, and the blues sounds of Elmore James, B.B. King, Otis Rush, Buddy Guy, Freddie King, and Hubert Sumlin. [24] "Basically, that was the start: a mixture between rock and blues."
Blues portal; This is a set category. It should only contain pages that are Jimmy Page albums or lists of Jimmy Page albums, ...
Jimmy Page: Session Man is a two-volume compilation album featuring tracks by various artists on which Jimmy Page performed as a session musician, recorded between 1963 and 1968. The album was released by AIP Records (a subsidiary of Bomp! Records) in 1989 (first volume) and the second was released in 1990.
Guitar Boogie is a blues rock compilation album featuring Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page together with the Allstars and members of The Rolling Stones.. The album was released in the US in 1971 by RCA Records; in the mid 1970s, Pickwick Records leased the rights to reissue several recordings in the RCA catalog and Guitar Boogie was briefly re-issued on the Pickwick label in 1977; RCA ...
Page discusses the skiffle and blues music that influenced him at the time. For many of Page's scenes, he is seen visiting Headley Grange, where several songs from Led Zeppelin IV were recorded, and in one scene, explains how the distinctive drum sound from "When the Levee Breaks" was achieved from the acoustics of the house in which it was ...
Neal Pattman (January 10, 1926 – May 4, 2005) [2] was an American electric blues harmonica player, singer and songwriter. [1] Sometimes billed as Big Daddy Pattman, he is best known for his self-penned tracks, "Prison Blues" and "Goin' Back To Georgia".