Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 7. Jan. 2014 · In 1963, 19-year-old Andrew Loog Oldman discovered a scruffy, six-piece blues band and knew all the right moves to make (look sharp, guys; lose the piano player and write some songs). But more than just ideas, he had a vision. With Oldham guiding The Rolling Stones' ship, the '60s would not unfold as originally planned.

  2. 2. Jan. 2013 · A hustler is only as good as his hustle, and in 1963, 19-year-old Andrew Loog Oldham hit the mother lode. On the night of 23 April of that year, the budding teen tycoon, having already successfully hawked himself to fashion designer Mary Quant and Beatles manager Brian Epstein as a happening hipster who knew a thing or two about a thing or two, walked into the Crawdaddy Club in Richmond ...

  3. 3. Jan. 2014 · ROLLING STONES DATA INTERVIEW: Andrew Loog Oldham. (Almost) Like a Rolling Stone. It’s no surprise at all arriving to Andrew Loog Oldham’s hotel room and find him on the phone. He’s lying in bed while he talks, and is sporting shorts and sandals. Being stuck to a phone must have been one of the most common tasks in his last fifty years ...

  4. Manager des Rolling Stones jusqu'en 1967, Andrew Loog Oldham est également cofondateur du label indépendant Immediate Records, qu'il dirige de 1965 jusqu'à sa faillite en 1970 1 . Via son label, il propose certaines chansons du duo Jagger/Richards des Rolling Stones à ses protégés comme Out of Time à Chris Farlowe ou encore As Tears Go ...

  5. 25. Mai 2000 · Wed 24 May 2000 21.03 EDT. A ndrew Loog Oldham, former manager of the Rolling Stones, is one of the most committed self-publicists the rock'n'roll business has ever seen, but even he couldn't ...

  6. 5. Nov. 2012 · As a seminal tour film is released, Andrew Loog Oldham recalls the band’s mid-Sixties heyday with Andrew Perry. By Andrew Perry 05 November 2012 • 8:15am Exile on Main St: Oldham with Jagger ...

  7. 29. Jan. 2024 · Andrew Loog Oldham’s journey begins with a touch of tragedy. Born on 29 January 1944, his father, Andrew Loog, a United States Army Air Force lieutenant of German descent, met an untimely end in June 1943 when his B-17 bomber was shot down over the English Channel. Buried at the Ardennes American Cemetery in Belgium, this loss left an indelible mark on Oldham’s early years.