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Living in the 70's is the debut album by Melbourne band Skyhooks. Released in October 1974 on the Mushroom Records label, the album achieved relatively little success until early 1975. It spent 16 weeks at the top of the Australian album charts from late February 1975, and became the highest-selling album by an Australian act in Australia until ...
"Living in the 70's" is a song by Australian band Skyhooks. Released in August 1974 as their debut and lead single from the band's debut album of the same name . The song peaked at number 28 in Australia.
Live (Iron Butterfly album) Live (Junior Walker album) Live Album (Grand Funk Railroad album) Live at Leeds; Live at London's Talk of the Town (The Temptations album) Live at Newport (Eddie Harris album) Live at Redlands University; Live at Slugs' Live at the Berlin Philharmonie; Live at the Hilcrest Club 1958; Live at the International, Las Vegas
The double LP live album represents the height of ‘70s rock excess, so leave it to the longwinded prog rockers of Yes to swing for the fences with a triple live album, complete with a Yessongs ...
The discography of the American rock band Live consists of nine studio albums (including The Death of a Dictionary, recorded when the band was known as Public Affection), one live album, two compilation albums, three extended plays, twenty-eight singles and twenty-six music videos.
1970 live albums (90 P) R. ... Pages in category "1970 albums" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 697 total. ... Wikipedia® is a ...
Angel Dust covered the song for their album Border of Reality in 1998. Blackfoot covered the song for their live albums Live on the King Biscuit Flower Hour in 1998 and On the Run–Live in 2004. Punk band The Dickies covered the song on their 1998 album Dogs from the Hare That Bit Us. D.C. Cooper covered the song on his 1999 solo album D.C ...
Mahogany Rush was a Canadian rock band led by guitarist Frank Marino.Formed in Montreal, Quebec in 1969, the band had its peak of popularity in the 1970s, playing venues as large as California Jam II.