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Graeme Milroy Glen Parker (born 1982 [3]) is a Scottish cattle hoof trimmer and YouTuber. His YouTube channel, The Hoof GP , was created in 2019 and primarily consists of videos of hoof trimming. It is the largest agricultural YouTube channel in the world with more than 100 million views a month and has more than six million followers across ...
Graham Parker chronology; Heat Treatment (1977) Stick to Me (1977) The Parkerilla (1978) Stick to Me is the third studio album by English singer-songwriter Graham ...
However, Parker's 1985 release Steady Nerves (credited to Graham Parker and The Shot) was a moderate success and included his only US top 40 hit "Wake Up (Next to You)". The Shot was a four-piece backing band, all of whom had played on either The Real Macaw or Another Grey Area : Brinsley Schwarz (guitar), George Small (keyboards), Kevin ...
"Stick to Me" is a song by British rock musician Graham Parker, recorded with his backing band the Rumour. The song was released on his 1977 album, Stick to Me.Inspired by "Tickets to Water Falls" by Jack Bruce, the song features a string arrangement that Parker sought to "use with power".
The Up Escalator was released as the follow-up to Parker's successful 1979 release, Squeezing Out Sparks. The Rumour's keyboardist, Bob Andrews had left the band after the Squeezing Out Sparks tour, being replaced on The Up Escalator by studio musician Nicky Hopkins, the E-Street Band's Danny Federici, and Peter Wood of Quiver. [2]
Steady Nerves is a 1985 album by Graham Parker and the Shot. [1]The album was produced by William Wittman, who Parker's record company, Elektra, initially opposed.Parker had originally proposed Squeezing Out Sparks producer Jack Nitzsche, but this had been rejected by Elektra.
Howlin' Wind is the debut album by English singer-songwriter Graham Parker and his band the Rumour, released in April 1976.The Rumour were mainly former pub rock musicians, including guitarist Brinsley Schwarz and keyboardist Bob Andrews of the band Brinsley Schwarz; Parker's recent jobs included working as a petrol pump attendant. [4]
The Mona Lisa's Sister is a 1988 album by Graham Parker. It was Parker's first album for RCA following an acrimonious split with Atlantic and the first he produced himself (with Brinsley Schwarz). The "stripped-down" sound of the album garnered critical acclaim and presaged a back-to-basics trend in rock music in the 1990s.