Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Jim Quick & Coastline (beach, "swamp soul") Blackwater (beach, rock, country) The Main Event Band (beach, R&B, funk, jazz) Where to park? Parking is $6 an hour, $7 for premium lots that are closer ...
During the band's 1970s heyday they released over a dozen albums for EMI and then Philips, and reached the Top 10 in the UK Albums Chart with their LP King Cotton. [2] They performed multiple times on national television, and had their own BBC Television series, The Fivepenny Piece Show .
The Quick's second album, International Thing, released by Epic in 1984, [1] showed the band moving away from their earlier dance-friendly roots, and adopting a more mainstream AOR approach, and incorporating a variety of styles that expanded their previous boundaries, to include a harder-edged rock sound.
Dave Mason and Jim Capaldi's 1998-99 "40,000 Headmen" reunion tour took its name from this song, despite the fact that Mason had no involvement in the original recording of the song. An album of highlights from this tour has been released.. Jim Capaldi's 2011 box set, Dear Mr Fantasy, includes a reggae version of the song. The song also appears ...
The Lyric is a 2006 jazz album by saxophonist and percussionist Jim Tomlinson and vocalist Stacey Kent, who sings on ten of the thirteen tracks. [1] The Lyric won the Album of the Year award at the 2006 BBC Jazz Awards. [2] The BBC's Gordon Miller recommended the album for its "craft, dedication and integrity". [1]
See today's average mortgage rates for a 30-year fixed mortgage, 15-year fixed, jumbo loans, refinance rates and more — including up-to-date rate news.
"Jim" [1] is a popular song with music by James Caesar Petrillo and Milton Samuels (who also used the pseudonym Edward Ross), lyrics by Nelson Shawn. [2] The song was published in 1941. [3] Two versions reached the Billboard charts in 1941: Jimmy Dorsey and His Orchestra (vocals by Bob Eberly and Helen O'Connell), which peaked at No. 2; and ...
Initially, the band worried that the song was "a bit too cute, too light a story," according to William Reid. However, as he stated, "When we recorded it, Hope and Jim sang and they just transcended it." [2] By the time the song was recorded, Sandoval was known to be a "good friend" to William, hinting at the pair's affair that would come to light.