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Blood, Sweat & Tears (also known as "BS&T") is an American jazz rock music group founded in New York City in 1967, noted for a combination of brass with rock instrumentation. BS&T has gone through numerous iterations with varying personnel and has encompassed a wide range of musical styles.
In 1975 Thomas returned to front Blood, Sweat & Tears again on the Columbia albums New City and, in 1976, More Than Ever. In 1977 they released Brand New Day on the ABC label. In 1978 Thomas issued another solo album on ABC, titled simply Clayton. In 1980 Blood, Sweat & Tears issued the MCA album Nuclear Blues, which also
John Scheinfeld's documentary, part exposé, part concert film, probes a controversial 1970 Iron Curtain tour and its impact on the horn-driven jazz-rock band's demise.
Live Nation’s concert streaming platform Veeps has set its first-ever global film premiere with rock documentary “What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears?” The doc’s exclusive PVOD ...
“What the Hell Happened to Blood Sweat & Tears?” is the question filmmaker John Scheinfeld (“Chasing ‘Trane,” “The U.S. vs. John Lennon”) asked the band’s co-founder and industry ...
He formed Blood, Sweat & Tears in 1967, leaving due to creative differences in 1968, after the release of the group's first album, Child Is Father to the Man. [7] He recorded Super Session with Bloomfield and Stephen Stills in 1968, [8] and in 1969 he collaborated with 15-year-old guitarist Shuggie Otis on the album Kooper Session.
"What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears?" is, in a funny way, like the squarest early-'70s concert film ever made, because the band travels behind the Iron Curtain…and there’s no ...
New City is the eighth album by the band Blood, Sweat & Tears, released by Columbia Records in April 1975. It peaked at Number 47 on the Billboard Pop Albums charts. New City marks the return to the line-up of lead vocalist David Clayton-Thomas .