Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Graham John Clifton Bond (28 de octubre de 1937 – 8 de mayo de 1974) fue un músico inglés, considerado uno de los padres fundadores del boom del rhythm and blues británico de los años 60. Bond fue un innovador, descrito en alguna ocasión como "una figura importante, minusvalorada, del primer R&B británico", 1 junto a Cyril Davies y ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Graham_BondGraham Bond - Wikipedia

    Graham John Clifton Bond (28 October 1937 – 8 May 1974) was an English rock/blues musician and vocalist, considered a founding father of the English rhythm and blues boom of the 1960s. Bond was an innovator, described as "an important, under-appreciated figure of early British R&B", along with Cyril Davies and Alexis Korner.

  3. www.wikiwand.com › es › Graham_BondGraham Bond - Wikiwand

    Graham John Clifton Bond (28 de octubre de 1937 – 8 de mayo de 1974) fue un músico inglés, considerado uno de los padres fundadores del boom del rhythm and blues británico de los años 60.

  4. The Graham Bond Organisation (GBO) were a British jazz/rhythm and blues group of the mid-1960s consisting of Graham Bond (vocals, keyboards, alto-saxophone), Jack Bruce (bass), Ginger Baker (drums), Dick Heckstall-Smith (tenor/soprano saxophone) and John McLaughlin (guitar).

  5. Graham John Clifton Bond (b. October 28, 1937, Romford, Essex; d. May 8, 1974, London, U.K.) was born a chronic asthmatic and, as a child, suffered constantly from his breathing impairment. He started playing the piano at an early age.

  6. Graham Bond (* 28. Oktober 1937 in Romford; † 8. Mai 1974 in London) war ein englischer Jazz - und Blues -Musiker, der angeblich sein eigenes Geburtsdatum nicht kannte und sich als unehelicher Sohn des Magiers Aleister Crowley ausgab. Er sang und spielte Saxophon und Keyboard.

  7. 7 de may. de 2024 · He was 36. It was a strange, messy end to a strange, unpredictable life. In his mid-60s prime, Graham Bond was a true originator and one of the key figures on the British music scene. As the driving force behind the Graham Bond Organization, he dragged trad jazz out of its fusty confines and made it jump with heavy doses of blues and wailing R&B.