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The Del Fuegos were an American 1980s garage-style rock band. Formed in 1980, the Boston , Massachusetts , United States–based band gained success in 1986 with their songs "Don't Run Wild" and "I Still Want You" and appearing in a widely seen television commercial for Miller Beer .
The Del Fuegos: Dan Zanes - lead vocals, guitar; Warren Zanes - guitar; Tom Lloyd - bass, vocals; Brent "Woody" Giessmann - drums, vocals; Additional personnel: Jorge Bermudez - percussion; Mitchell Froom - keyboards
Smoking in the Fields is an album by the American band the Del Fuegos, released in 1989. [2] [3] It was the band's final studio album. [4] [5] The album peaked at No. 139 on the Billboard 200. [6] Its first single was "Move with Me Sister". [7] The Del Fuegos supported the album by touring with James McMurtry. [8]
It should only contain pages that are The Del Fuegos albums or lists of The Del Fuegos albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Del Fuegos albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
[13] The Globe and Mail determined that "the Del Fuegos do what they do respectably, but the style is backward-looking to a fault." [14] The Washington Post concluded: "When roots-rock works, it's because the musicians claim the traditions and use them to create their own sound; on Stand Up, it's the Del Fuegos who sound used." [15]
So, he added a small number of women to his band, renamed it the Rocket Ship Revue, and began making a full-length homemade album, enlisting the help of some people he had met when he was a Del Fuego – Sheryl Crow, Suzanne Vega, and Simon Kirke, the drummer for Bad Company. [citation needed] The album, Rocket Ship Beach (2000), [4] was also a ...
Warren Zanes is an American musician and writer who has been known as guitarist for The Del Fuegos, a solo artist, and the biographer of Tom Petty.A Ph.D. in Visual and Cultural Studies, [1] Zanes is the former vice president of education and public programs for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum and executive director of Steven Van Zandt's Rock and Roll Forever Foundation. [2]
During the time of this arrangement, the label released albums by prominent Los Angeles punk and rock and roll bands, including Fear, The Blasters, L7 and Los Lobos, as well as comparable punk and garage rock bands such as Austin's Rank and File and Boston's Del Fuegos. The label flourished even after the magazine stopped in 1980.