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Nightwing is a British rock band, originally formed in 1978 as "Gordon and Friends" by bassist Gordon Rowley (formerly of Strife), keyboardist Kenny Newton, [2] and guitarist Eric Bert Percival. The original line-up was Gordon Rowley, Eric Percival, Kenny Newton and Paul Ellson. [3]
[442] [210] In 2020, it expanded into a music imprint including a record label, Studio 54 Music, [443] [444] [445] which works with Sirius XM on Studio 54 Radio. [446] The label's first release, Night Magic Vol. 1 , is a four-track compilation EP of disco anthems from the club's prime days, revised by musicians from both the original scene and ...
The Last Days of Disco is a 1998 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Whit Stillman, and loosely based on his travels and experiences in various nightclubs in Manhattan, including Studio 54.
Nightwing in his New 52 costume. Cover of Nightwing (vol. 3) #0 (November 2012). Art by Eddy Barrows. In September 2011, The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. In this new timeline, Grayson's costume changed the color of the "Nightwing symbol" from blue to red, and the emblem rolled over the shoulders, rather than traveling down the arm onto the ...
"Disco: The Soundtrack of a Revolution," airing on PBS Tuesday, ties the music not just to its place in the evolution of pop but to the liberation movements of the time.
Locations included Copacabana, Directoire, the Ginza, the Limelight, Max's Kansas City, Studio 54, Area, Bonds International Casino, Zanzibar (Newark), The Box (Chicago), The Twilight Zone (Toronto) Ware House, Paradise Garage. [1] and City Hall (Venezuela). [9] In 1980, Long won the Billboard award for Best Disco Sound Design. [10]
Molly Ringwald thinks she can pinpoint the exact — and fairly public — moment her motherhood journey began. “I believe that Mathilda was conceived in the dressing room at Studio 54 right at ...
A Night at Studio 54 is a double album that features 17 disco tracks popularized and played regularly at Studio 54; according to music critic Robert Christgau, the album includes all of disco's AM radio crossover successes "plus major floor hits." [9] Rubell described the album as "the equivalent of a night at Studio 54."