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The Original Wishbone Ash: 1981 The Best of Wishbone Ash: 1993 Time Was: The Wishbone Ash Collection: 1994 The Very Best of Wishbone Ash: Blowin' Free: 1997 The Best of Wishbone Ash: Distillation: 1999 Millennium Collection: 2001 Blowin' Free: An Introduction to Wishbone Ash: 2003 The Collection: Warriors: 2004 Backbones: Lost Pearls: 2005 ...
Wishbone Ash on stage in Charlotte, North Carolina, US, in 1972. Wishbone Ash was formed in October 1969 by bass guitarist Martin Turner and drummer Steve Upton. When Tanglewood's original guitarist, Martin's brother Glenn Turner, left the trio and returned to his native Devon, their manager, Miles Copeland III, advertised for a guitar player and also for a keyboard player.
It should only contain pages that are Wishbone Ash albums or lists of Wishbone Ash albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Wishbone Ash albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Wishbone Ash are an English hard rock band from Torquay, Devon. Formed in October 1969, the group originally included bassist and lead vocalist Martin Turner , guitarists and vocalists Andy Powell and Ted Turner , and drummer Steve Upton . [ 1 ]
[3] Also in 2023, Wishbone Ash undertook a 50th anniversary tour celebrating the album, and recorded and released Live Dates Live, as a tribute to the original Live Dates. [ 3 ] Band founder and original bass guitarist Martin Turner also celebrated the 50th anniversary of the album in 2023, by touring across the UK. [ 4 ]
Wishbone Ash is the first studio album by Wishbone Ash. [2] It peaked at number 29 in the UK Albums Chart in January 1971. [4] Background.
Pages in category "Wishbone Ash compilation albums" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Wishbone Four is the fourth studio album by British rock band Wishbone Ash, released in 1973. It was a departure from their previous album, Argus , in that it lacked that recording's overall cohesion and atmosphere and the loose conceptual framework of a stately, pastoral and warring medieval England.