Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Utopia is the second of two self-titled albums by the rock group Utopia (the other being Todd Rundgren's Utopia). It was released in 1982 (see 1982 in music). It was also their only album for Network Records. During the composing phase of this album, Kasim Sulton had left to pursue a solo career, and Doug Howard from the band Touch was brought ...
This page was last edited on 29 October 2012, at 16:41 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
On his 1973 album A Wizard, a True Star, Rundgren had sung the line "Wait another year, Utopia is here.". For a short period of time (1973–74) Todd Rundgren's Utopia consisted of Rundgren plus Hunt Sales and Tony Fox Sales together with the late David Mason (a musician from Florida, not to be confused with the former Traffic guitarist Dave Mason) [1] and "M. Frog" (Jean-Yves Labat), who ...
Todd Rundgren's Utopia is the debut album by the American rock band Utopia, released on October 4, 1974 on Bearsville Records. The band was formed in 1973 by musician, songwriter, and producer Todd Rundgren who decided to expand his musical style by moving from pop-oriented rock towards progressive rock. He assembled a six-piece group that ...
In the original image, the album the boy holds is a copy of the Beatles' Capitol Records debut LP Meet the Beatles!, but on the Utopia cover this has been photographically replaced with an image of the Swing to the Right cover (thereby creating the illusion of an endless regression of the same image).
After the American death metal band Cannibal Corpse released their debut album Eaten Back To Life in 1990, it was banned from being sold or displayed in Germany because of its graphic cover art ...
Welcome to Band Jury, a SPIN series in which artists defend black sheep albums they feel deserve another listen. These are projects that, for whatever reason (middling sales, negative reviews, a ...
Oblivion is an album by the rock group Utopia, released in January 1984. [1] The album represents a turning point for the band, stepping away from the stripped-down sound of their 1982 self-titled album in favor of a fuller, more mainstream contemporary pop sound. This direction was continued on POV, the band's final album released the ...