Quicksilver and More Find a Salem 66 Song and It is a Good Day / Additional discographical, biographical information was added by Lawrence Azrin. Also, check out the links at your leisure.
Time
Performer [Composer]
Song
Album [Format]
Misc
Misc –
REQ:Request
BED:Music Played Whilst Talking
NEW:New Release
( ):Label, Year Rec/Rel
Recent research has concluded that Songwriter/ Arranger/ Session musician Artie Butler was responsible for nearly the entire production except guitar parts and vocals (up to 20 different female singers), gradually building up the track up on an Ampex tape machine at 71⁄2 IPS mono (15 IPS was 'professional' speed) This took place over a week, running up of costs of $60,000, then an exorbitant amount of time and money for a single track. / Click on Link above, to view the original French EP(!) with a colour picture sleeve
The album title comes from a tenement street in Glasgow, near where Bruce grew up; the street, since demolished, was famous as the largest unbroken houserow in Europe, stretching for over a mile. The front cover photo was taken near the Harmony Row tenement. / ... Click on the Link above, to view the original album
This album was inducted into "The Blues Hall of Fame" in 1991, as a Classic of Blues Recording. / Click on the Link above, left, to view the original album.
Time:
4:32
Artist:
Sloppy Henry [with "Peg Leg" Howell] [1st time artist played (by track-blaster) on WMBR!!]
The album title refers to a phrase used by English comedian Tony Hancock, of whom the Libertines' Pete Doherty is an avid fan - "Up The Bracket" is a slang term meaning a punch in the throat.
During the sessions for their second album "Wow", Spence freaked out, threatened to attack his follow band members and was committed to Bellevue Hospital. After six months confinement, the day he was released he drove on his new motorcycle to Nashville in early Dec 1968, to record his only solo album "Oar".
During the sessions for their second album "Wow", Spence freaked out, threatened to attack his follow band members and was committed to Bellevue Hospital. After six months confinement, the day he was released he drove on his new motorcycle to Nashville in early Dec 1968, to record his only solo album "Oar".
* - The song's first line was used as the title of the book "Our Band Could Be Your Life: Scenes from the American Indie Underground, 1981–1991", by Michael Azerrad. // Slant Magazine listed the album at No. 77 on its list of "Best Albums of the 1980s". /// AcclaimedMusic.net ranked the album the 305th most acclaimed album of all time. + According to "American Hardcore: A Tribal History" (Steven Blush), this album was, along with Husker Du's 'Zen Arcade', "either the pinnacle or downfall of the pure hardcore scene.