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Bryan Ferry CBE (born 26 September 1945) is an English singer and songwriter who was the frontman of the band Roxy Music and also a solo artist. [2] His voice has been described as an "elegant, seductive croon". [ 3 ]
She began dating Bryan Ferry after his girlfriend Jerry Hall left him for Mick Jagger. [5] Ferry was fourteen years her senior. [7] On 26 June 1982, at the age of twenty two she married Bryan Ferry at the Church of St Anthony and St George at Duncton, West Sussex. [7] They had four sons: Otis, Isaac, Tara, and Merlin. [2] They divorced on 31 ...
The Roxy Music singer, Bryan Ferry, started working on the material for Avalon while staying at Crumlin Lodge on the west coast of Ireland. Ferry was there with his girlfriend, Lucy Helmore, who would become his wife in 1983. The album cover artwork featured the same lough (lake) that can be seen from the lodge. [8]
The Bride Stripped Bare is the fifth solo studio album by English singer Bryan Ferry. It was released in 1978, shortly before Ferry reconvened his band Roxy Music which had been on hiatus for three years. It was recorded after his girlfriend Jerry Hall left him for Mick Jagger in 1977, and appears to contain references to their break-up. The ...
Veteran singer and Roxy Music frontman Bryan Ferry has entered into a partnership with Irving Azoff’s Iconic Artists Group “to develop and expand the renowned artist’s musical legacy to new ...
Bryan Ferry in the music video. The song's main promotional video featured Mandy Smith and model Denice Lewis, whose photograph also adorns the single's cover sleeve. [5] The musicians Chester Kamen (Nick Kamen's brother) and Guy Pratt also appear in the video.
The term WAG, an acronym for wives and girlfriends, is typically used in relation to the high profile women associated with professional athletes. Recently, there seems to be a new addition to the ...
In November 1970, Bryan Ferry, who had just lost his job teaching ceramics at a girls' school for holding impromptu record-listening sessions, [1] advertised for a keyboardist to collaborate with him and Graham Simpson, a bassist he knew from his Newcastle art-college band, the Gas Board.