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  1. Hace 1 día · TAB EN PDF : https://bit.ly/3wzDLu8CURSO DE GUITARRA : https://bit.ly/3wPVKclEn el vídeo de hoy nos vamos a salir de nuestras temáticas habituales como el bl...

  2. Hace 2 días · Musicians Toyah Willcox and Robert Fripp have released another cover in their Sunday Lunch series, this time giving Alice Cooper’s ‘Poison’ from Trash a fresh and exciting spin. ‘Poison’ is undeniably one of the shock rock star’s most notable tracks, making it the perfect muse for Willcox and Fripp’s upbeat series celebrating golden oldies through the ages.

  3. Hace 21 horas · It won’t be just Steve Vai playing Robert Fripp’s parts. But Robert’s parts are fantastic, and they will need to be there “I think it really relieved Steve a lot because he wants to make sure that what we do is honorable to the originals. Not that we have to play them exactly the same, and not that we're going to be a cover band.

  4. Hace 2 días · King Crimson founder Robert Fripp and his wife, Toyah Willcox, have shared a throwback performance of the Alice Cooper classic, "Poison", for their weekly Sunday Lunch. Check it out below. On a recent episode of Rob Squad And The Creators featuring Robert Fripp and Toyah Willcox is available for streaming...

  5. Hace 1 día · Toyah and Robert Fripp are back with an all-new episode of Sunday Lunch this week, covering “Venus” which was a #1 hit for Dutch band Shocking Blue in 1970 and then a #1 hit for Bananarama in 1986. Watch that along with video of the Shocking Blue and Bananarama versions of the song below.

  6. Hace 2 días · It’s another archive Sunday Lunch performance from the kitchen as Robert Fripp and Toyah Willcox pull out the Alice Cooper hit from 1989. Nice nurse outfit, Toyah.

  7. Hace 4 días · Photo: “robert fripp” by Sean Coon from Greensboro, USA (CC BY-SA 2.0) a certain fear in the hearts of musicians and listeners alike. On her forthcoming Drifts and Surfaces , the electro-acoustic ambient artist Elori Saxl reportedly confronts “the blurring of physical and digital worlds” and “the paradox of everyday stasis and constant change.”