Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Death (proto-punk band) Doug Deming & the Jewel Tones; Demolition Doll Rods; Destroy All Monsters (band) Detroit (band) The Detroit Cobras; The Detroit Emeralds; Detroit Grand Pubahs; Detroit Party Marching Band; Detroit Symphony Orchestra; The Detroit Wheels; The Dirtbombs; Dirty Americans; Discipline (band) Dogleg (band) The Donays; Doop and ...
In 1967, Detroit blues-rock outfit The Woolies had a regional smash hit with the Bo Diddley song "Who Do You Love?". [28] Tommy James and the Shondells had several top 40 hits including "I Think We're Alone Now" and "Crimson and Clover". In the late 1960s, two well-known high-energy rock bands emerged from Detroit – the MC5 and Iggy and the ...
Gallery was an American soft rock band, formed in Detroit, Michigan by Jim Gold. [1] While Gallery did record a number of songs, they are most famous for their 1972 hit single "Nice to Be with You", written by Gold. [2] The song was arranged and produced by Dennis Coffey and Mike Theodore and released by Sussex Records.
"Make It with You" is a song written by David Gates and originally recorded by American pop-rock group Bread, of which Gates was a member. Gates and drummer Mike Botts are the only members of the group to appear on the recording, [ 4 ] which was Bread's only No.1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
There’s a purpose to the timing: “My Girl” was released on Dec. 21, 1964, a day when “the winter solstice brought one of the warmest, sunniest Motown hits ever put to vinyl,” as we wrote ...
They had a hit with their version of the Lou Reed - penned song "Rock & Roll", which Reed liked enough to ask Steve Hunter to join his backing band. Ryder quit the group because of voice problems in 1972, and Detroit vocalist Rusty Day (formerly of the American Amboy Dukes and Cactus ) took over his spot; without Ryder, the group floundered ...
A marching band out of a church on Detroit's east side has helped hundreds of young people earn scholarships. Detroit marching band, percussionists, dancers funded by program founder’s 9-5 job ...
The Detroit Wheels were an American rock band, formed in Detroit in 1964. They served as Mitch Ryder 's backup band from 1964 to 1967. The band had a number of top twenty hits in the mid-1960s before lead singer Ryder was enticed away by Bob Crewe with offers of a solo career, after which the group quickly dissolved.