Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 21. Juli 2023 · View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2023 Vinyl release of "When A Guitar Plays The Blues" on Discogs. ... Vocals – Otis Clay. B1: Short Fuse. Tenor Saxophone – Steele "Sonny" Seals* Tenor Saxophone – Steele "Sonny" Seal ...

  2. April 2020. Roy Buchanan (1939-1988) hat mit seinem einzigartigen Fender Telecaster-Sound viele andere Gitarristen inspiriert. Leider hat der scheue Künstler selbst nie den Bekanntheitsgrad erlangt, den er verdient gehabt hätte. 1985 ist auf Bruce Iglauer's Alligator-Label mit "When a guitar plays the blues" Roy's elfte Platte erschienen.

  3. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1985 Cassette release of "When A Guitar Plays The Blues" on Discogs. ... Vocals – Otis Clay. Written-By – Malone*, Morrison* Vocals – Otis Clay. Written-By – Malone*, Morrison* 4:28: B1: Short Fuse. ...

  4. For his 1985 Alligator debut, this blues-rock guitar master chose and arranged all the songs. That was a first, and it's certainly a big part of the reason Roy was able to call this Grammy nominee "the best record I've ever made." Otis Clay, Sonny Seals and Gloria Hardiman guest, but Roy's guitar is the star on "Chicago Smokeshop," "Mrs. Pressure," "A Nickel and a Nail," "Country Boy" and more ...

  5. When A Guitar Plays The Blues ( LP, Album, Stereo, Hub-Servall Pressing) Alligator Records. AL 4741. US. 1985. New Submission. When A Guitar Plays The Blues ( CD, Album, Reissue) Alligator Records, Sonet. ALCD 4741, SNTCD 940.

  6. Recorded and mixed at Streeterville Studios, Chicago, Illinois. This album is dedicated to the late Jimmy Nolen . Steele "Sonny" Seals is credited for Tenor Sax on "Short Eyes", but no such track on CD. Issued in a standard jewel case with a 4-page booklet. Total playing time 42:16.

  7. Otis Clay, Chi-town's number one soul man, belts O.V. Wright's A Nickel and A Nail clean through to next week. Plus, look out for a few impromptu surprises: Roy's growl on Country Boy ("yeah, I'm country . . . "), the Bach fugue quoted at the opening of the title track, and Hawaiian Punch, the Elmore James-inspired boogie that was squeezed into the closing minutes of the last session.