Only just discovered that Rick Astley co-wrote Mission Statement with Fish.
Does anyone know how this came about?
Only just discovered that Rick Astley co-wrote Mission Statement with Fish.
Does anyone know how this came about?
Jason Falkner and R Stevie Moore?
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Ian Beabout
Mixing and mastering engineer. See ya at ProgDay !
https://cuneiformrecords.bandcamp.co...m/bakers-dozen
https://cuneiformrecords.bandcamp.co...-and-holland-3
colouratura.bandcamp.com
Keith Emerson and Peter Hammill.
My progressive music site: https://pienemmatpurot.com/ Reviews in English: https://pienemmatpurot.com/in-english/
Greg Hawkes (keyboardist of The Cars) co-writing Happy the Man’s “Service With a Smile” with Ron Riddle.
Confirmed Bachelors: the dramedy hit of 1883...
Didn't Greg Lake write a song with Bob Dylan?
I'm still blown away by Daryl Hall on Fripp's Exposure, and that's god knows how many years old.
"Arf." -- Frank Zappa, "Beauty Knows No Pain" (live version)
Steven Wilson and Andy Partridge
The Prog Corner
Jon Anderson and Lamont Dozier
Music isn't about chops, or even about talent - it's about sound and the way that sound communicates to people. Mike Keneally
Trevor Rabin and Anthony Moore.
It's the closest we'll ever get to that merger of YesWest and Henry Cow that we've always dreamed of!
Charlie Drake and Peter Gabriel
Fripp produced Hall's first solo album, Sacred Songs. When he did his second solo album, several years later, Daryl did a Guest VJ spot on MTV, where he played the Beat Club clip of Larks Tongues In Aspic I (which MTV aired regularly at the time on their Closet Classics show). He said that Larks Tongues In Aspic was the record that made him want to work with Fripp in the first place, though he said he had no recollection why.
Anyhow, as I recall, Exposure, Sacred Songs, and that Gabriel record that Fripp produced (was it the second or third one), were meant to represent some sort of trilogy of Fripp's efforts to explore "commercial" music (or something like that). But Daryl's record company initially refused to release Sacred Songs, apparently feeling it would damage his "market value" or whatever. They eventually did release the album, something like 2-3 years late.r
If I remember correctly, Ron brought Service With A Smile with him. Apparently, he and Greg had been in another band together, before Greg joined The Cars, and that's when wrote that one together.Greg Hawkes (keyboardist of The Cars) co-writing Happy the Man’s “Service With a Smile” with Ron Riddle.
Didn't know about that one, but Moore also collaborated with David Gilmour on some of the songs on A Momentary Lapse Of Reason and The Division Bell.Trevor Rabin and Anthony Moore.
It's the closest we'll ever get to that merger of YesWest and Henry Cow that we've always dreamed of!
John O'Brien-Docker and Lucifer's Friend
"Always ready with the ray of sunshine"
Man, I just keep thinking about how John Lawton went from Lucifer's Friend to the Les Humphries Singers, then onto Uriah Heep. That just seems like a weird career trajectory. Bad-ass proto-metal to Eurovision to a formerly bad ass hard rock band, all in under 7 years!
Jon Anderson and Gowan
Has anyone mentioned the Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. songwriting credit on Ambrosia’s “Nice, Nice, Very Nice”? It doesn’t really count as a “collaboration,” though, since apparently the band just asked for his permission to use the poem from Cat’s Cradle as the basis for a song, with Joe Puerta padding it out with extra lyrics.
Makes me think of some of the funny songwriting credits found on the Solar Plexus albums, though (Norman Mailer, Lawrence Ferlenghetti).
Lawton was in LF and LHS at the same time. I don’t think LF was anyone’s main/only gig, as they were all doing lots of sessions at the time, the band did lots of exploitation records for dodgy labels under fake band names (Pink Mice, Hell Preachers Inc., The Fantastic Pikes, etc.) and some of them (for sure keyboardist Peter Hecht) were also in James Last’s orchestra!
Confirmed Bachelors: the dramedy hit of 1883...
Never knew any of that, but I guess it makes sense. I get the impression that sort of thing happened with a lot of bands. The members of Heldon, for instance, apparently did a lot of session work. I remember Steve Feigenbaum saying one time that he asked Pinhas about that, with his reply being, "Yes, we were all whores!". I remember Steve saying that he got burned buying a few records that he people like Francois Auger or Didier Batard on them, only to be confronted with entire albums of chansons.
So are the "exploitation" records worth looking into?
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