Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song was covered by the British blues/rock band Ten Years After on their album, Undead. The original recording by Woody Herman and His Orchestra received the Grammy Hall of Fame Award in 2002. [4] "Twistin' at the Woodchopper's Ball" written by Ronn Metcalfe was a 1962 hit based on Herman's song, which attained a gold album status.
Metcalfe said of the song, "This is the way back to the big bands. [ 3 ] " "Twisting at the Woodchopper's Ball" was a hit recording written by Ronn Metcalfe, based on Woody Herman 's " Woodchopper's Ball " (1939).
Undead is a live album by Ten Years After, recorded at the small jazz club Klooks Kleek in London on 14 May 1968, and released in July of that year. The show combined blues, boogie and jazz playing that merged more traditional rock and roll with 1950s-style jump blues.
The 'Low Spark', for me, was the spirit, high-spirited. You know, standing on a street corner. The low rider. The 'Low Spark' meaning that strong undercurrent at the street level. [3] At 11 minutes and 44 seconds, it is the longest track on the album. The song (and the album) received wide praise, both in print and on broadcasts. [4]
"High and Low", a 2006 song by Greg Laswell "High and Low" (Empire of the Sun song), 2016 "High and Low" (Tove Styrke song), 2011 "High & Low" (song), a 2023 song by Gemma Hayes "Hi & Low", a song by boy band the Wanted on their 2010 album The Wanted; High & Low Down, a 1971 album by Louisiana blues musician Lightnin' Slim
High Low may refer to: High-low split, a poker variation; High-Low, a 1957 American game show; High–low pricing, a type of pricing strategy; High/Low, a 1996 album by Nada Surf; High–low system, a design for artillery shells and grenade-launcher ammunition; High Low, an album by Nathan Wiley "High Low", a song by The Unlikely Candidates
The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys is the fifth studio album by English rock band Traffic, released in 1971. The album was Traffic's most successful in the United States, reaching number 7 on the Billboard Top LPs chart and becoming their only platinum -certified album there, indicating sales in excess of one million.
The song is known to have been sung by British soldiers on the Western Front during the First World War. [5] Lyn MacDonald reports that, on one occasion in 1916, General Douglas Haig heard it being sung by a column of soldiers as they marched past on their way to the Somme .