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DAVE EDMUNDS: RINGO STARR: ELVIS COSTELLO: GIRLS TALK Rockpile Dave Edmunds - Guitars, Vocals Nick Lowe - Bass, Vocals Billy Bremner - Guitars, (More) Rockpile Dave Edmunds - Guitars, Vocals Nick Lowe - Bass, Vocals Billy Bremner - Guitars, Vocals Terry Williams - Drums John Williams - Bass, Vocals 1972 B.J. Cole - Guitars 1972 Andy Fairweather-Low - Guitars, Vocals 1972 Pick Withers - Drums 1972 Although the "official" Rockpile line up which was solidified in 1976 and consisted of Nick Lowe, Billy Bremner and Terry Williams, Rockpile was actually the title of guitarist Dave Edmunds' (formerly of Love Sculpture) 1972 debut solo album. The musicians for that album, which included former Love Sculpture bassist John Williams, drummer Terry Williams (formerly of Man) and guitarist Andy Fairweather-Lowe (formerly of Amen Corner) toured briefly in early '72 as Dave Edmunds And Rockpile. Later on in the year Edmunds launched another tour as Rockpile with Pick Withers (who would later join Dire Straits) on drums. This initial Rockpile helped kick off U.K.'s pub rock movement which included such bands as Ducks Deluxe and Brinsley Schwarz. Nick Lowe, Terry Williams, Dave Edmunds and Billy Bremner Brinsley Schwarz bassist Nick Lowe met Edmunds and Williams on the pub circuit and Edmunds produced Brinsley Schwarz's last album in '74. Nick Lowe made contributions to Edmunds 1975 album Subtle As A Flying Mallet. In '76, session guitarist Billy Bremner joined and the "official" Rockpile went on tour as the opening act for Bad Company. Seconds Of Pleasure - 1980 Columbia (U.S. release) The group made an appearance at The Concert For The People Of Kampuchia which featured a slew of rock acts from Queen to Paul McCartney And Wings. Their live version of Little Sister featured Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant on vocals. Although Nick Lowe's Labour Of Lust and Dave Edmunds' Repeat When Necessary (both released in '79) were recorded with Rockpile, the group only recorded and released one album under the Rockpile moniker in 1980 which charted at #27 and included the hit single Teacher, Teacher. As Rockpile started their 1981 tour, they had a bitter split. Edmunds and Lowe resumed their recording and production work, Terry Williams joined Dire Straits and Billy Bremner temporarily replaced the late James Honeyman-Scott in The Pretenders. Dave Edmunds 1972 1983 1961 Guitars The Raiders sessions 1962 Guitars, Vocals The Raiders sessions 1965 Guitars, Vocals Image sessions 1966 Guitars, Vocals Image sessions 1967 Bass Guitars, Vocals Guitars, Vocals, Keyboards The Seftones The Human Beans Love Sculpture sessions sessions sessions 1968 Guitars, Vocals, Keyboards Love Sculpture Blues Helping 1969 Guitars, Vocals, Keyboards Love Sculpture Forms And Feelings 1970 Guitars, Vocals, Keyboards Guitars, Vocals, Keyboards, Bass, Engineer, Producer Love Sculpture Dave Edmunds Rockers sessions sessions 1971 Guitars, Vocals, Keyboards, Bass, Engineer, Producer Dave Edmunds sessions 1972 Producer, Engineer, Guitars Guitars Guitars, Vocals, Bass, Keyboards, Producer Producer Guitars, Vocals Foghat Kenny Young Dave Edmunds Man Man sessions Clever Dog Chase The Sun sessions Rockpile Be Good To Yourself At Least Once A Day sessions Christmas At The Patti sessions 1973 Guitars, Vocals, Bass, Producer Producer Dave Edmunds Pete Dunton sessions Taking Time/Still Confused sessions 1974 Producer, Engineer, Vocals Guitars, Engineer Producer, Guitars Producer, Guitars, Vocals Guitars Guitars, Vocals, Bass, Keyboards Brinsley Schwarz Ducks Deluxe The Flamin' Groovies Rockfield Chorale Chris Jagger Stardust New Favourites Of Brinsley Schwarz sessions sessions Shake Some Action sessions Evensong/Amberley sessions Adventures Of Valentine Vox The Ventriloquist Soundtrack 1975 Guitars Guitars, Vocals, Bass, Keyboards, Producer, Engineer Ducks Deluxe Dave Edmunds Taxi To The Terminal Zone Subtle As A Flying Mallet 1976 Guitars Producer Graham Parker And The Rumour Mot (Less)
Nick Lowe Nick Lowe (born Nicholas Drain Lowe, March 24, 1949, Walton-on-Thames) is an English (More) Nick Lowe (born Nicholas Drain Lowe, March 24, 1949, Walton-on-Thames) is an English singer-songwriter, bass guitarist and producer who records and performs in a number of different musical styles. He currently lives in Brentford, London.++++++++++++++++++++++++Career He began his recording career in 1966 as a member of Kippington Lodge, founded with his friend Brinsley Schwarz, which released a few singles on Parlophone. Three years later Kippington Lodge had changed its name to Brinsley Schwarz and its musical focus to country- and blues-rock. Lowe's best-known songs from the Brinsley Schwarz era are "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding," which was a major hit for Elvis Costello in 1979, and "Cruel to Be Kind," a song the other band members rejected but was later a solo hit for Lowe. After leaving Brinsley Schwarz in the mid-1970s, Lowe began playing in Rockpile with Dave Edmunds. In August 1976, Lowe released "So It Goes" b/w "Heart of the City", the first single on the Stiff Records label where he was in-house producer (the label's first EP was Lowe's 1977 four-track release Bowi, apparently named in response to David Bowie's contemporary LP Low) . On this and other labels, Lowe would go on to produce The Damned's Damned, Damned, Damned and many albums by Elvis Costello, including My Aim Is True, This Year's Model, and Armed Forces. His early 'rough & ready' production style earned him the nickname Basher (as in 'bashing them out'). Upon moving from Stiff to Jake Riviera's Radar and F-Beat labels, Lowe became extremely selective in his choice of production tasks. Because the two main writers in Rockpile had contracts with different record labels and managers, albums were always credited to either Lowe or Edmunds, so there is only one official Rockpile album, from the very end of the collaboration1980s Seconds of Pleasure, featuring the Lowe songs "When I Write The Book" and "Heart"but all of Lowe's and Edmunds' solo albums from the period were effectively Rockpile albums. Rockpile's demise was hastened by a number of conflicts between Lowe's and Edmunds' respective managers, not Lowe and Edmunds themselves. Lowe's best-known song from this era is probably "I Knew the Bride When She Used to Rock 'n' Roll" (the verse structure and topic adapted from Chuck Berry's "You Never Can Tell" (a.k.a. "Teenage Wedding"), but adding a chorus section to Berry's verse-after-verse format). On the 1977 Live Stiffs compilation with a pickup band called Last Chicken in the Shop, he virtually sneers out his contempt for all concerned; in 1985, fronting Nick Lowe and His Cowboy Outfit on the album The Rose of England, he hasn't changed the words, but the tone is entirely different, even affectionate (the song was produced by Huey Lewis, while his band The News played on the track). Lowe was quoted as saying that he had "escaped from the tyranny of the snare drum", when explaining his move away from regular pop music that would get played on mainstream radio. Other well-known Lowe songs include "I Love The Sound of Breaking Glass," "All Men Are Liars," and "Cruel to Be Kind,", co-written with Ian Gomm and originally recorded with Brinsley Schwarz, a re-recording of which was his only US Top 40 hit, reaching #12 on the Billboard charts in 1979. In 1979, Lowe married country singer Carlene Carter, daughter of country singers Carl Smith and June Carter Cash and step-daughter of Johnny Cash. He adopted her daughter, Tiffany Anastasia Lowe. The marriage ended in the mid-eighties, but they remained friends, and Lowe remained close to the Carter/Cash family; he and Johnny Cash played and recorded together, and Cash recorded several of his songs. 2005 saw the birth of Nick Lowe's first son, Roy Lowe. After the demise of Rockpile, Lowe toured for a period with his band Noise To Go and later with The Cowboy Outfit, which also included the noted keyboard player Paul Carrack. Lowe was also a member of the short-lived mainly studio project Little Village with John Hiatt, Ry Cooder, Trevor Whittaker, and Jim Keltner. In 1992, "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding" was covered by Curtis Stigers on the soundtrack album to The Bodyguard, an album that sold over 15 million copies. Because Lowe received royalties from these sales, he suddenly found himself a millionaire. Freed from commercial constraints, Lowe has recorded more solo albums in his own very individual style to critical acclaim. A New York Daily News article[1] quoted Lowe as saying his greatest fear in recent years was "sticking with what you did when you were famous". "I didn't want to become one of those thinning-haired, jowly old geezers who still does the same shtick they did when they were young, slim and beautiful," he said. "That's revolting and rather tragic." Rock critic Jim Farber observed: "Lowe's recent albums, epitomized by the new At My Age, moved him out of the realms of ironic pop and animated rock and into the role of a worldly balladeer, specializing in grave vocals and graceful tunes. Lowe's four most recent solo albums mine the wealth of American roots music, drawing on vintage country, soul and R&B to create an elegant mix of his own." (Less)
BRINSLEY SCHWARZ- SILVER PISTOL 1972
2009-03-22 - extension: zip - size: 31 MB
BRINSLEY SCHWARZ- SILVER PISTOL 1972
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