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Day After Day: Live is a CD release by Rykodisc in 1990 of live recordings made by the British rock group Badfinger in 1974. During a concert tour in the Midwestern United States in 1974, Badfinger learned that the Agora venue in Cleveland, Ohio, contained a 16-track setup capable of live recordings. The group had released five studio albums up ...
Classic Rock critic Rob Hughes rated "Day After Day" as Badfinger's greatest song, due to the "unassailable melody, plaintive vocals and lovestruck sentiment" as well as Harrison's "wonderful slide solo." [11] Ultimate Classic Rock critic Michael Gallucci rated it as Badfinger's 2nd best song, highlighting Harrison's "distinctive guitar playing."
The Best of Badfinger, Vol. 2: 1990 Day After Day: Live: 1995 Come and Get It: The Best of Badfinger: 1997 BBC in Concert 1972–1973: 2000 The Very Best of Badfinger: 2002 Live 83 – DBA-BFR: 2010 Magic Christian Music; No Dice; Straight Up; Ass (remastered albums on CD, with bonus tracks) 2010 Apple Records Extra: Badfinger: 2013 Timeless ...
Day After Day may refer to: "Day After Day" (Badfinger song) Day After Day: Live, a 1990 album by Badfinger "Day After Day (The Show Must Go On)", a song by The Alan Parsons Project from I Robot "Day After Day" (Def Leppard song), 2000 "Day After Day" (Elnur Hüseynov and Samir Javadzadeh song) "Dag efter dag" (English: "Day after day"), a song ...
The songs illustrate Badfinger's rock side, which was never really captured on any of the band's studio albums. Molland and Pete Ham dominate the recordings on lead guitars. The last track on the CD is a live recording of the hit " Come and Get It ", recorded by Badfinger in 1970 for the BBC show " Top of the Pops ".
After Evans and Molland split in 1982, Gibbins joined Tom Evans and Bob Jackson to create another Badfinger to rival that of Molland. Gibbins soon quit, and Evans died by suicide in 1983. A year later, Gibbins, Jackson, and Molland toured as Badfinger for a brief period. [1]
Ham returned after the three weeks off in time for a tour, and Jackson remained in the band as a full-time keyboardist. Jackson was in Badfinger from 1974 to April 1975, when the band ended following the suicide of Pete Ham aged 27. Jackson did return in a new version of the band led by Tom Evans in 1982.
Straight Up is the fourth studio album by the Welsh rock band Badfinger, released in December 1971 in the United States and February 1972 in Britain.Issued on the Beatles' Apple record label, it includes the hit singles "Day After Day" and "Baby Blue", and the similarly popular "Name of the Game", all of which were written by singer and guitarist Pete Ham.