Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song was the third UK Top 20 hit for C.C.S. and their most successful. It reached number five in the UK Singles Chart in September 1971 and remained in the chart for 15 weeks. [2] The song was choreographed for BBC dance troupe Pan's People at Kempton Park pumping station. [3]
CCS, sometimes written as C.C.S., was a British musical group, led by blues guitarist Alexis Korner. [1] The name was derived as an abbreviation of Collective Consciousness Society . Formed in 1970 by musical director John Cameron and record producer Mickie Most , CCS consisted largely of session musicians , and was created primarily as a ...
C.C.S. was the first studio album of the British blues outfit CCS, led by guitarist Alexis Korner.To avoid confusion with the group's second album with the same name, the album is often called "Whole Lotta Love", due to the inclusion of the Led Zeppelin song.
The album includes covers of songs by The Kinks and Cream amongst others, and it is equally split with original compositions. The style continues that of their previous two albums, with heavy rock and blues songs arranged with jazz instruments. The single "The Band Played the Boogie" charted as high as number 36 on the UK Official Charts. [2]
C.C.S. was the second studio album of the British blues and jazz outfit CCS, led by guitarist Alexis Korner.This album is usually called C.C.S. 2 to avoid confusion with the first, eponymous album, even though that title cannot be found anywhere on the record or sleeve.
Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated, Free At Last, CCS, Snape Musical artist Alexis Andrew Nicholas Koerner (19 April 1928 – 1 January 1984), known professionally as Alexis Korner , was a British blues musician and radio broadcaster, who has sometimes been referred to as "a founding father of British blues ". [ 2 ]
How many CC songs this concept appears in: four, or five, or seven, depending on how willing you are to suspend your disbelief Most iconic usage: “There’s a piece of Maria in every song that I ...
The song is sung by Martha Wash and rapped by Freedom Williams; it was written by Robert Clivillés, Williams, and David Cole, and produced by Clivillés and Cole. The song charted internationally and achieved great success in Austria, Canada, Germany, Sweden, and the United States, where it reached number one on the dance charts.