Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In September 2009, a reformed Death played three shows with original members Bobby and Dannis Hackney, with Lambsbread guitarist Bobbie Duncan taking the place of the late David Hackney. [16] During a 2010 performance at the Boomslang Festival in Lexington, Kentucky, the band announced that Drag City would release a new album with demos and ...
Spiritual • Mental • Physical is a retrospective album by the Detroit proto-punk band Death consisting mainly of demo tracks recorded in their home rehearsal space between 1974–1976. Many of the songs on the set display a raw and spontaneous character, which anticipates the punk rock movement that was just around the corner in New York ...
A Band Called Death is a 2012 American documentary film directed by Mark Christopher Covino and Jeff Howlett. The documentary is about the 1970s Detroit rock band Death and their new-found popularity decades after the group recorded their music. The film premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival in 2012 and was well received by film critics.
The Dear Hunter, an American progressive rock band, Nick and Casey Crescenzo; Death proto-punk band formed in Detroit as a funk band 1971 by brothers Bobby (bass, vocals), David (guitar), and Dannis (drums) Hackney; DeBarge, an American R&B music group composed of brothers Mark, Randy, El, Bobby, James, and sister Bunny
Rough Francis is a rock band from Burlington, Vermont consisting of Bobby, Julian, and Urian Hackney, along with Tyler Bolles. The Hackney brothers originally formed the group in 2008 to pay tribute to the music of their father's (and uncles') early 1970s proto-punk band Death.
The discography of Death consists of seven studio albums and four live albums. Death was an American death metal band formed in 1984. The band's founder, Chuck Schuldiner, is considered "a pioneering force in death metal". [1] The band ceased to exist after Schuldiner died of brain cancer in 2001, [2] though it remains an enduring death metal ...
The streaking craze had struck North Carolina, on this full-moon night in 1974, the Tar Heels broke the national record for public nudity, all while posing for pictures and waving American flags ...
In 1975 the band entered a studio to record a 12-song album. After refusing to change their group's name, Death was turned away by Clive Davis of Columbia Records. Only seven songs were completed and the album was never released. [3] The surviving songs were released as ...For the Whole World to See in 2009 by Drag City. [4]