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Kimball was born in Orange, Texas but raised in nearby Vinton, Louisiana. (Vinton did not have a hospital.) He started singing as a child, dabbling on vocals and playing piano and acoustic guitar in a musical household throughout his youth - mostly covering and performing 1950s and 1960s R&B hits, 1800s Traditional Olde Tyme music; as well as rare local Swamp pop and Cajun folk songs, typical ...
Rise Up, a 1990 album by Bobby Kimball; Rise Up (Peter Frampton album), 1980; Rise Up! (Bobby Conn album), 1998; Rise Up! Shteyt Oyf!, a 2002 album by the Klezmatics; Rise Up (Thomas Mapfumo album), 2005; Rise Up (Yves Larock album), 2008; Rise Up!, a 2008 album by Lonnie Smith; Rise Up (Cypress Hill album), 2010; Rise Up (Colors of Peace), a ...
In 1994 Toto co-founder and long time vocalist Bobby Kimball included a rock version of the song as opener on his solo album Rise Up. [47] Kimball's version is closer to the arrangement of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young than to Mitchell's original.
Before Byron was brought in, the band recorded "Goin' Home" with Kimball. This song was later featured on the Toto XX album as an "unreleased song". When Byron was brought in (in 1989) he and Toto recorded four new songs which were included on their greatest hits album Past to Present 1977–1990, released in 1990. [24]
Despite its being labeled as a compilation album, Steve Lukather in 2014 defined the album as the tenth studio album overall (see Toto XIV). The first single released, "Goin' Home" was recorded during Bobby Kimball 's brief first reunion with the band in 1989, prior to the record company's decision to replace him with new lead singer Jean ...
"Hold the Line" is a song included by American rock band Toto on its 1978 eponymous debut studio album. It was written by the band's keyboardist David Paich, and lead vocals were performed by Bobby Kimball. "Hold the Line" was released by Columbia Records as the lead single from the Toto album in September 1978, also being Toto's debut single.
It was released in Europe and Japan in March 1999, followed by a US release on November 16, 1999. Mindfields saw the return of vocalist Bobby Kimball , who had departed the band in 1984 during recording sessions for the Isolation album.
"Rise Up" is a pop song recorded by the Canadian group the Parachute Club on their self-titled 1983 album. It was produced and engineered by Daniel Lanois , and written by Parachute Club members Billy Bryans , Lauri Conger , Lorraine Segato and Steve Webster , with additional lyrics contributed by filmmaker Lynne Fernie .