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Slade Alive, Vol. 2 is the second live album by the British rock band Slade.It was released on 27 October 1978 and did not enter the charts. [1] Titled as the follow-up to the band's commercially and critically successful 1972 album Slade Alive!, the performances on Slade Alive, Vol. 2 were taken from the band's autumn 1976 tour of the United States and their spring 1977 UK tour. [2]
The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" by Roberta Flack was the number one song of 1972. Al Green had three songs on the Year-End Hot 100, the most of any artist in 1972. This is a list of Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 1972. [1] The Top 100, as revealed in the year-end edition of Billboard dated December 30, 1972, is based on Hot 100 ...
The song is subsequently released around Europe, having been recorded in several languages, including in English as Come What May. March 31 – Official Beatles fan club closes down. April 2 – John Lennon and Yoko Ono hold a press conference in New York. The Lennons discuss their appeal against the US Immigration Department's decision to ...
Journey is the third and final studio album by British rock band Kingdom Come, known as Arthur Brown's Kingdom Come [1] outside the UK. After the band featured drastically different styles on their first two albums, and after several line-up changes, band leader Arthur Brown worked the band towards a new direction for Journey.
Tour Setlist. This is the setlist from the show at the Los Angeles Forum, August 18, 1971. [32] All songs written by Stephen Stills, except where noted. "Rock and Roll Woman" "Questions" "Helplessly Hoping" "Fishes and Scorpions" "Go Back Home" "Love the One You're With" "Black Queen" "Change Partners" "Know You Got to Run" (Stills, John ...
AC/DC was the opening act for several concerts on this tour. [2] The costumes and stage show were carried over from the Love Gun Tour, with minor changes made to the setlist. During the show in Pittsburgh, Peter Criss had passed out in the middle of the concert. After a brief intermission, he returned to finish the show with his bandmates. [3]
The tour proceeded largely without incident, but on 10 August in Gothenburg, Sweden, Paul and Linda McCartney were fined US$1,200 for possession of marijuana. Paul joked that the incident would "make good publicity" for the tour, in comments reported around the world at the time (e.g. Miami Herald , 12 August 1972 [ 3 ] ).
The songs were recorded at several concerts between 1968 and 1970 in Los Angeles, New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Detroit, and Copenhagen. [1] The Doors' producer, Paul A. Rothchild, remarked, "I couldn't get complete takes of a lot of songs, so sometimes I'd cut from Detroit to Philadelphia in midsong. There must be 2,000 ...