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Richard Davies (born 1964) [1] is an Australian-American musician. Davies was born in Sydney, Australia. [1] He first came to prominence in the early 1990s as leader of the Australian band The Moles. [1] Upon moving to the United States, Davies joined with Eric Matthews to form Cardinal, whose debut album, Cardinal, was released by Flydaddy in ...
Richard Davies (musician) (born 1964), Australian singer-songwriter; Richard Michael Davies, better known as Dik Mik, synthesizer player for Hawkwind; Rick Davies (musician), multi-instrumentalist and member of Amoeba; Rick Davies (Richard Davies, born 1944), British musician, vocalist for Supertramp
Cardinal is an American indie pop duo founded by musicians Richard Davies and Eric Matthews.The duo was formed in 1992 following Davies' relocation from Australia to the United States, where he met Matthews while both were living in Boston, Massachusetts.
1967: Heavy Sounds with Elvin Jones (Impulse!, 1968) 1969: Muses for Richard Davis (MPS, 1970) 1971: The Philosophy of the Spiritual (Cobblestone, 1971) - also released as With Understanding (Muse, 1971)
Rick Davies in 2002. Davies decided to form a new band, and returned home from Switzerland to place an ad in the music magazine Melody Maker in August 1969. Roger Hodgson was auditioned and, despite their contrasting backgrounds – Davies's working class upbringing and Hodgson's private school education – they struck up an instant rapport [8] and began writing virtually all of their songs ...
The Moles were formed in Sydney and debuted in 1990 with the EP Untune the Sky.In 1991 they released their second EP, Tendrils and Paracetamol. 1992 followed their first full-length album Untune the Sky, after which The Moles relocated to New York, where they released a pair of seven-inch singles (later packaged together as the Double Single EP).
This was the line up that played at Glastonbury, Reading and T in the Park festivals in 1994, and who recorded the majority of the songs on the album 'Volcanoes'. A final line up appeared post recording of the band's only album 'Volcanoes' comprising NJ Wilow (vocals), Richard Davies (guitar), Garry Becker (bass) and Dan Neumann (drums). [1]
Richard Davis (April 15, 1930 – September 6, 2023) was an American jazz bassist. Among his best-known contributions to the albums of others are Eric Dolphy's Out to Lunch!, Andrew Hill's Point of Departure, and Van Morrison's Astral Weeks, of which critic Greil Marcus wrote (in The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll), "Richard Davis provided the greatest bass ever heard on a ...