enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. U.S. Field Artillery March - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Field_Artillery_March

    Friedlander suggested it be built around a song already known as The Caisson Song (alternatively The Field Artillery Song or The Caissons Go Rolling Along). The song was thought to perhaps be of Civil War origin, and was unpublished, and its composer believed to be dead. Sousa agreed, changed the harmonic structure, set it in a different key ...

  3. Road crew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_crew

    Road crews (roadies) working on the stage construction for a concert in an outdoor amphitheater in Portsmouth, Virginia.. The road crew (also known as roadies) are the support personnel who travel with an artist or band on tour, usually in sleeper buses, and handle every part of the concert productions except actually performing the music with the musicians.

  4. The Army Goes Rolling Along - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Army_Goes_Rolling_Along

    Robert A. Heinlein used the 1908 Caisson Song as the basis for "The Road Song of the Transport Cadets", the official song of the fictional United States Academy of Transport in his 1940 short story "The Roads Must Roll". However, characters in the story refer to the origin as both the "Song of the Caissons" and the "field artillery song." [11]

  5. List of bands named after other performers' songs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bands_named_after...

    Steeleye Span, after the character John "Steeleye" Span in the song "Horkstow Grange"; the song was the inspiration for the band's name, but they only got around to recording it 28 years after first forming. Talk Talk, Mark Hollis had originally written the song for his first group The Reaction, under the name "Talk Talk Talk Talk".

  6. Family (Willie Nelson's band) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_(Willie_Nelson's_band)

    In 1966, he formed a new lineup for his road band, consisting of Johnny Bush on guitar; Jimmy Day on the steel guitar; Paul English on drums; and David Zettner on bass. The band was originally named "The Offenders", but after it was rejected by the promoters, the name was changed to "The Record Men", after Nelson's single "Mr. Record Man". [3]

  7. List of people who performed on Beatles recordings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_who...

    By the mid-1960s, the Beatles became interested in tape loops and found sounds. [36] [37] Early examples of the group sampling existing recordings include loops on "Revolution 9" [37] (the repetitive "number nine" is from a Royal Academy of Music examination tape, some chatter is from a conversation between George Martin and Apple office manager Alistair Taylor, and a chord from a recording of ...

  8. The Road Hammers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Road_Hammers

    The Road Hammers are a Canadian country rock group composed of Jason McCoy, Clayton Bellamy and Chris Byrne. Formed by McCoy as a side project, the trio's music is influenced by 1960s and 1970s trucker music and Southern rock. Their first self-titled album included remakes of several classic truck-driving songs.

  9. Roy Book Binder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Book_Binder

    Book Binder soon sought out Davis, who also lived in New York, and became his student and later his chauffeur and tour companion. [1] Much of Book Binder's original material is based on his time on the road with Davis. By the mid- to late 1960s Book Binder was recording for both Kicking Mule and Blue Goose Records. [1]