Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This was the last Traffic album for 20 years, when Winwood and Capaldi reunited for Far from Home in 1994. When the Eagle Flies was the band's fourth consecutive studio album to reach the American Top Ten [ 1 ] and have gold album status.
Traffic were an English rock band formed in Birmingham [4] in April 1967 by Steve Winwood, Jim Capaldi, Chris Wood and Dave Mason. [5] They began as a psychedelic rock group and diversified their sound through the use of instruments such as keyboards (such as the Mellotron and harpsichord), sitar, and various reed instruments, and by incorporating jazz and improvisational techniques in their ...
"Los Angeles" is the debut solo single written and performed by Frank Black. It was the first track on his solo debut album Frank Black , released in 1993. [ 1 ] It served as the main theme song for the short lived but cult favorite VH1 talk show Late World with Zach .
This single was released after Mason left Traffic the first time, following Mr. Fantasy. "Medicated Goo" and "Shanghai Noodle Factory" were the A and B-sides of a UK Traffic single released in December 1968. The mono single version of "Medicated Goo" is a shorter edit with false ending that is not heard on the stereo album.
In January 1968, after some initial success in Britain with their debut album Mr. Fantasy, Dave Mason had departed from the group. He produced the debut album by the group Family, containing in its ranks future Traffic bass player Ric Grech, while Traffic went on the road. [4] In May, the band had invited Mason back to begin recording the new ...
On The Road is the second live album (two LPs on initial European releases; later reissued on one CD) by English rock band Traffic, released in 1973.Recorded live in Germany, it features the Shoot Out at the Fantasy Factory band, with the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section of keyboardist Barry Beckett, bassist David Hood, and drummer Roger Hawkins.
The prosecutor called Leasure “the most corrupt policeman in the city of Los Angeles in its history.” Leasure called himself “the nicest, quietest, mildest guy you'll ever want to meet.”
The album's cover art was an original piece spraypainted by Joey Krebs (also known as "The Street Phantom", "The Phantom Street Artist", or Joel Jaramillo), a well-known Los Angeles graffiti artist who has exhibited at numerous galleries in Los Angeles, New York City, and throughout the United States. [8]