Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Road Home, a live album released in 1995, is the fourteenth album overall by the rock group Heart. It chronicles a club performance in the " unplugged " style in their home city of Seattle . The setlist contains acoustic versions of many of the band's hits including " Dreamboat Annie ", " Alone ", " Barracuda ".
Supertramp's lineup in 1971 From left: Roger Hodgson, Frank Farrell, Rick Davies, Kevin Currie, Dave Winthrop. The English rock band Supertramp recorded over 100 songs from 1970 to 2002. They were one of the most popular British bands in the 70s and 80s, known for their success with progressive rock. [1]
"Take the Long Way Home" is the third US single and sixth track of English rock band Supertramp's 1979 album Breakfast in America. It was the last song written for the album, being penned during the nine-month recording cycle. [3]
2002: One More for the Road Tour – Mannheim School / Slow Motion / Over You / Bloody Well Right / Tenth Avenue Breakdown / Cannonball / Sooner or Later / Free as a Bird / Downstream / Asylum / Give a Little Bit / From Now On / Take the Long Way Home / Another Man's Woman / The Logical Song / Goodbye Stranger / Encores: Broken Hearted / Rudy ...
The discography of the American rock band Heart consists of 15 studio albums, nine live albums, nine compilation albums, 64 singles and 35 music videos. The group, led by Ann and Nancy Wilson, have sold about 35 million records worldwide.
Heart recorded their first album Dreamboat Annie in Vancouver in 1975. It was released in the United States in 1976, with "Magic Man" becoming Heart's first Top 10 hit in the United States, peaking at No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100, and "Crazy on You" hitting number 35. Both songs were co-written by Ann and Nancy Wilson.
In the summer of 1997, Supertramp returned to the road, resulting in the live It Was the Best of Times (April 1999). [ 51 ] After a three-year hiatus, Supertramp released in April 2002 a new studio album entitled Slow Motion , [ 52 ] followed by a 2002 world tour entitled "One More for the Road Tour".
The track list spans the band's history from 1975 through 1995, though Capitol Records did not have the licensing to some of Heart's earlier work as it had been issued on other labels. Therefore, some of Heart's earlier singles are presented in alternate live acoustic versions, as featured on the 1995 release The Road Home .