Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Man with the Horn is an album released by Miles Davis in 1981. It was Davis's first new studio album since 1972’s On the Corner, his first recordings of any kind since 1975 and his first activity following a six-year retirement. The album title references his 1952 10-inch LP Young Man with a Horn.
"The Man with the Horn" is a song performed by Genesis drummer Phil Collins, and released as a B-side for two singles from No Jacket Required. The song was originally recorded during sessions for Collins' second album, Hello, I Must Be Going!, in 1982, although it appeared as the B-side to "Sussudio" in the U.K., and as the B-side to "One More Night" in the United States.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
The Man with the Horn", though not released as a single (nor was it included on the album), charted at number 38 on the Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks. [ 40 ] No Jacket Required remains Collins' highest-selling album, having sold over 12 million copies as of 2001 in the US, where it was certified diamond status. [ 43 ]
Young Man with a Horn, a novel by Dorothy Baker, loosely based on the life of Bix Beiderbecke; Young Man with a Horn, a film adaptation of the novel; Young Man with a Horn, an album featuring Doris Day and Harry James performing songs from the film's soundtrack; Young Man With A Horn (Miles Davis album), a 10" jazz album on Blue Note by the ...
A Man With a Horn is an album by jazz saxophonist Lou Donaldson featuring 1961 & 1963 sessions recorded for the Blue Note label (but not released until 1999), one performed by Donaldson with organist Brother Jack McDuff, guitarist Grant Green and drummer Joe Dukes, and the other with Grant Green, trumpeter Irvin Stokes, Big John Patton and drummer Ben Dixon.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Decoy is the first album Davis recorded without the help of longtime producer Teo Macero.Macero still had plans, including recording Davis with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, but Davis insisted on producing the album himself.