Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Cats were a Dutch rock band formed in Volendam in 1964. They were active (with a few interruptions) from 1964 until 1985 and had their most successful period from 1968 until 1975. Of the many hits the band had at home and abroad, the biggest one is " One Way Wind ", which was released in 38 countries and a top ten number in several of them ...
The Cats may refer to: The Cats (Dutch band), a Dutch rock band; The Cats (reggae band), a British reggae band; Cats U.K., a British pop band; The Cats, a 1957 jazz album featuring Tommy Flanagan and John Coltrane; The Cats, a Swedish film; The Cats, an Italian film; The Cats, a nickname of the Kilkenny Hurling Team
It should only contain pages that are The Cats albums or lists of The Cats albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Cats albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Their 1968 single, "Swan Lake", backed by "Swing Low", hit no. 48 in the UK Singles Chart in early 1969, making them the first British reggae band to have a top fifty hit in the UK. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] According to Kpiaye "Swan Lake" was recorded during the Maximum Sound session, the single was released on the group's own Baf label.
The Cats is a jazz album released in December 1959 on New Jazz, a subsidiary label of Prestige Records. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is credited to pianist Tommy Flanagan , saxophonist John Coltrane , guitarist Kenny Burrell , and trumpeter Idrees Sulieman .
The Love in Your Eyes is a studio album from 1974 by the Dutch pop band The Cats.Recorded in Larrabee Sound Studios with the help of backing musicians, Billboard said its "crisp pop selections" should make it a commercially successful album; they also praised its technical qualities. [1]
Cats in Space (styled CATS in SPACE - The Band) [1] [2] is a British rock band formed in Horsham, West Sussex, in 2015 by guitarist Greg Hart and drummer Steevi Bacon. Following the band's inception, vocalist Paul Manzi , keyboardist Andy Stewart, bassist Jeff Brown, and second guitarist Dean Howard were recruited to complete the official lineup.
All tracks written by T. S. Eliot and Andrew Lloyd Webber, with any additional writers noted. [1]In the later Polydor reissue of the recording, the third track on disc two is incorrectly listed as containing "The Ballad of Billy McCaw", a duet based on an unpublished poem by Eliot that was used in the original London production.