Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Live Sparks by Graham Parker & the Rumour, Graham Parker released in 1979. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic. ... Squeezing Out Sparks (1979) The Up Escalator (1980) Three Chords Good (2012) Mystery Glue (2015) AllMusic Review

  2. Lead Vocals, Rhythm Guitar – Graham Parker. Liner Notes – Nigel Williamson. Mastered By – Bob Ludwig, Jeff Sanders, Mark Howlett, Robin McBride. Producer – Jack Nitzsche. Remastered By – Gary Moore (2) Rhythm Guitar, Backing Vocals – Martin Belmont. Technician [Studio Assistant] – Phil Bodger.

  3. Squeezing Out Sparks is the fourth studio album by English singer-songwriter Graham Parker and his band the Rumour. The album was released in March 1979. Although the Rumour were not credited on the cover, their name was included on the album label.

  4. Amazonレビュー. Squeezing Out Sparks was not only Parker's finest moment, but it still stands up today as one of rock's best albums. When it was first released in 1979, Arista simultaneously issued Live Sparks, a collection of live radiocasts that featured the same 10 songs in the same order plus the Jackson 5's "I Want You Back" and Parker's kiss-off to his former label, "Mercury Poisoning."

  5. Listen to Squeezing Out Sparks + Live Sparks on Spotify. Graham Parker & The Rumour · Album · 1979 · 22 songs.

  6. Details: I recently bought a second-hand copy of Squeezing Out Sparks by Graham Parker And The Rumour. While the actual cover, labels, and matrix (AB 4223 SA/AB 4223 SB) seem identical to the record listed under Arista – AB 4223 , there is a small, white, wrap-around white sticker applied to the top left of the front cover (continuing around the spine to the back) with plain black, all-caps ...

  7. 14 de feb. de 2022 · On this week’s episode, we take on an “angry young man” and dive headfirst into what many consider Graham Parker’s finest artistic statement, 1979’s Squeezing Out Sparks.. By 1979, Parker, backed by a fantastic group of former pub rock musicians known as the Rumour, had recorded three albums of horn-infused soulful rock and roll, when he decided he needed to take a different direction.