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Mickey Jones (June 10, 1941 – February 7, 2018) was an American musician and actor. He played drums with acts such as Trini Lopez and Bob Dylan , with whom he played on his 1966 world tour. He became a founding member of The First Edition with singer Kenny Rogers , and played on all of their albums.
Bassist Mickie Jones (born Donald Eugene Jones on December 17, 1952, later changed to Michael David Jones in 1967), died in San Dimas, California on September 5, 2009, at the age of 56, [6] after a long battle with liver cancer. Jones performed on four Angel albums (Angel, Helluva Band, On Earth as It Is in Heaven and An Anthology). He toured ...
He began his professional music career in the early 1960s as a member of the band Nero and the Gladiators, who scored two minor British hit singles in 1961. After the demise of Nero and the Gladiators, Jones worked as a songwriter and session musician in France for such artists as Françoise Hardy, Sylvie Vartan, and Johnny Hallyday ("The French Elvis"), for whom he wrote many songs, including ...
Angel is the first album by the rock band Angel. "Tower", the keyboard-heavy opening track, [3] was used widely during the late 1970s and early 1980s by album rock radio stations in the US for various advertising purposes.
Chuck Day, Mickey Jones: 2:10 (***) Edit fade-out stereo. The full 6:15 minutes only mono version was released as B-side of single "Secret Agent Man" the same year.
Pages in category "Songs written by Mick Jones (Foreigner)" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Mickey 17 (March 7) In Bong Joon Ho's follow-up to his Oscar-winning film Parasite , Robert Pattinson, one of our last true movie stars , plays an "expendable" who is sent on a dangerous mission ...
Just Dropped In To See What Condition My Condition Was In" is a psychedelic rock song written by Mickey Newbury and best known from a version by the First Edition, recorded in 1967 and released to popular success in 1968. Said to reflect the LSD experience, the song was intended to be a warning about the dangers of using the drug. [1]