Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Nine is a 1973 album by the British folk rock group Fairport Convention. It is their ninth album since their debut in 1968, and the second to include Trevor Lucas and Jerry Donahue. No original members of Fairport Convention were involved in making the album. According to AllMusic, it is the band's most uneven album. [1]

  2. 8 Jack O'Diamonds. 9 Gone Gone Gone. 10 Suzanne. 11 If It Feels Good, You Know It Can't Be Wrong. 12 Eastern Rain. 13 Fotheringay. 14 I Still Miss Someone. 15 Bird on the Wire. 16 Tried So Hard.

  3. Gemma Padley 2007. After forty years of Fairport Convention, undoubtedly one of the most influential folk collectives to have ever existed, here we have the release of a deluxe version of perhaps ...

  4. 5 de abr. de 2007 · I just thought that I'd mention that there have, of course, been Fairport BBC Sessions released in the past on the Heyday album. So, people may already have a number of these tracks. I have the original issue of the Heyday CD on Hannibal which contains 12 tracks. I never did get around to buying the expanded edition which included another 8 songs.

  5. Fairport Convention. Fairport Convention es un grupo de folk rock británico, pionero en el uso de instrumentos eléctricos. La banda se formó en abril de 1967 y pasó rápidamente de hacer versiones de grupos estadounidenses de la Costa Oeste a un estilo peculiar que combinaba el rock con melodías y canciones tradicionales inglesas.

  6. 16 de mar. de 2021 · Fairport Convention, 1971. Clockwise from top: Dave Pegg, Simon Nicol, Dave Swarbrick, Dave Mattacks. For the sequence of songs at the start of the original Side 2 of the album, Lee is tried, found guilty, condemned and incarcerated to await his gruesome fate. Swarb takes the vocal lead on the songs now identified as Trial Song, Cell Song, The ...

  7. Unhalfbricking is the third studio album by the English folk rock band Fairport Convention and their second album released in 1969. It is seen as a transitional album in their history and marked a further musical move away from American influences towards more traditional English folk songs that had begun on their previous album, What We Did on Our Holidays and reached its peak on the follow ...