Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 15 de may. de 2015 · B.B. King’s first Royal Albert Hall appearance came on 22 April 1969, at a co-headline performance by the 43-year-old guitarist and Fleetwood Mac.. The evening saw support from fellow blues luminaries Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee and Duster Bennett.. He returned to the capital two years later in 1971 – a period which saw him work with the likes of Ringo Starr, Fleetwood Mac’s Peter Green ...

  2. 26 de sept. de 2013 · Peter Green is the most outstanding British blues guitar player to come out of the 1960s blues boom. Clapton, Page, McLaughlin... yeah they were brilliant too but for me the art is in the soul and Peter Green had soul. Loads of it. Maybe even too much. BB King said "He has the sweetest tone I ever heard; he was the only one who gave me the cold sweats" and Green’s stunning solo on Fleetwood ...

  3. In London, an Album by B.B. King. Released in October 1971 on ABC (catalog no. ABCX-730; Vinyl LP). Genres: Electric Blues, Blues. Rated #404 in the best albums of 1971. Featured peformers: Ed Michel (producer), Joe Zagarino (producer, engineer), Baker Bigsby (assistant engineer), Andy Hendriksen (assistant engineer), Pete Booth (assistant engineer), Chris Kimsey (assistant engineer), Rufus ...

  4. 2 de ago. de 2023 · A chat from 1995 when Gary Moore was preparing his album of Peter Green songs, using the Greeny Les Paul. Skip to main content. Open menu Close menu ... Gary Moore performs at Alexandra Palace in London, during the London Music Festival, August 5, 1973 ... you’ve worked with many legendary figures including BB King and Albert Collins.

  5. 30 de ago. de 2023 · Back in his prime, he was between 5' 8" and 5' 9". There's an old picture floating around of Peter playing next to 5' 9" BB King and they appear to be equal in height. Mick Fleetwood was 6' 6 ...

  6. 15 de sept. de 2021 · Stylistically, BB King’s first few albums were heavily indebted to his idol T-Bone Walker, but by the early 60s he was his own man, and a powerful influence on a gang of white kids in London that included Peter Green, future Rolling Stone Mick Taylor and those two’s predecessor in John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Eric Clapton.

  7. B.B. King's In London was released in 1971 on ABC Records in the US and Probe Records in the UK. It features an all-star cast of musicians, with the likes of Ringo Starr (who plays drums on "Ghetto Woman", "Wet Hayshark" and "Part-Time Love") and Alexis Korner (who composed and plays guitar on "Alexis' Boogie"), plus Peter Green, Bobby Keys, Klaus Voorman, Jim Keltner, Mac Rebennack and more.