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The cover image of Stormbringer is based on a photo. On 8 July 1927 a tornado near the town of Jasper, Minnesota, was photographed by Lucille Handberg. [4] Her photograph has become a classic image, [5] and was used and edited for the album's cover.
Stormbringer! is a 1970 album released by John and Beverley Martyn. It has no connection to Michael Moorcock's 1965 Elric novel of the same name. John Martyn wrote six of the ten songs and Beverley four. The album was recorded under the direction of Paul Harris in Woodstock, New York.
MK III: The Final Concerts, alternatively entitled Archive Alive, is a live album by Deep Purple, recorded during the band's 1975 European tour in support of the Stormbringer album. It was released in 1996.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stormbringer!_(John_and_Beverley_Martyn_album)&oldid=505518230"
Archive is compilation album by English rock band Magnum. It is a collection of previously unreleased demo and outtake material recorded from 1976 to 1983, and was released in 1993 by Jet Records. [1] Most of the material released here was used as bonus tracks for Magnum's expanded and remastered series on Sanctuary Records.
[1] [2] Roadrunner Records lists Opeth's version among their 13 wildest covers, calling it a faithful cover and noting the band's guitarist/vocalist Mikael Åkerfeldt's "unexpectedly soulful vocals". [3] Black Majesty on the 2007 album Tomorrowland. Bosquito on the 2003 album Cocktail Molotov. Blackmore's Night on the 2002 album Past Times with ...
After Deep Purple's 1976 split-up, Coverdale formed his own band, Whitesnake [2] which over the years has featured Deep Purple members such as Jon Lord and Ian Paice, and has performed Deep Purple songs from the lineups he was part of, Mark III and IV, such as "Burn", "Mistreated", "Might Just Take Your Life" and "Stormbringer".
At the beginning of the track. This album was released in 1975 following allegations of a hidden message in 1974's Eldorado, and was a satirical response. [31] "Fire on High" "The music is reversible, but time... (violin note) is not. Turn back! Turn back! Turn back! Turn back!" [30] [32] Reversal of a deep mumbling spoken by drummer Bev Bevan.