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  1. Fred Neil (16 de Março de 1936 – 7 de julho de 2001) [1] foi um cantor e compositor de blues e folk dos Estados Unidos, cuja carreira desenvolveu-se entre os anos 1960 e os 1970, quando ele abandonou a indústria da música.Neil é compositor de sucessos como "Candy Man" (lado B de "Crying", de Roy Orbison), e "Everybody's Talkin'" (Harry Nilsson), [1] bem como "A Little Bit Of Rain" e "The ...

  2. Fred Neil, né le 16 mars 1936 à Cleveland, dans l'Ohio [1] ... Harry Nilsson lui doit sa version de Everybody's Talkin', immense hit lorsqu'il apparut sur la bande originale du film Macadam Cowboy [8]. ... 1971 : Other Side of This Life (Capitol) Postérit ...

  3. 10 de jul. de 2001 · Fred Neil, the influential folk musician whose song "Everybody's Talkin' " became the theme of the film "Midnight Cowboy" but who ... “The Other Side of This Life,” which also was recorded ...

  4. 20 de feb. de 2019 · Everybody's Talkin': A Tribute to Fred Neil by VARIOUS ARTISTS , released 20 February 2019 1. Eric Andersen - The Dolphins 2. Bob Ingram - A Little Bit of Rain 3. Jim Wurster & Omine - Dade County Jail 4. Arlan Feiles - Ba-De-Da 5. Charlie Pickett - The Other Side of This Life 6. Diane Ward & Jack Shawde - Everthing Happens 7.

  5. 13 de ene. de 2023 · Other than Bob Dylan, Fred Neil was perhaps the single most influential singer-songwriter of the '60s US folk boom. With his cavernous baritone and loose-limbed acoustic guitar strumming, he was probably the first singer-songwriter to integrate jazz and blues into his sound.

  6. The Other Side Of This Life and Little Bit Of Rain are tender and spaced-out ballads that predate psychedelia by a few months. Fred Neil (Capitol, 1967), also known as Everybody's Talkin' , features his most famous song, Everybody's Talkin' (but more famous in Harry Nilsson's interpretation), Dolphins , and the celestial Fare Thee Well .

  7. The bluesiest of his albums, it contained some of his best songs, including "Little Bit of Rain," "Other Side of This Life," and "Candy Man." His true peak was his follow-up, Fred Neil, which made a full transition to electric instruments. Less bluesy in tenor, it featured "Everybody's Talkin'," as well as an equal gem in "The Dolphins."