When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Angel's Egg (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angel's_Egg_(album)

    Angel's Egg is the fourth studio album by the progressive rock band Gong, released on Virgin Records in December 1973. It was recorded using the Manor Mobile studio at Gong's communal home, Pavillon du Hay, Voisines, France, and mixed at The Manor, Oxfordshire, England. The album was produced by "Gong under the direction of Giorgio Gomelsky".

  3. Steve Hillage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Hillage

    Stephen Simpson Hillage (born 2 August 1951) [2] is an English musician, best known as a guitarist. [3] He is associated with the Canterbury scene and has worked in experimental domains since the late 1960s. Besides his solo recordings he has been a member of Uriel, Khan, Gong and System 7.

  4. 2032 (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2032_(album)

    2032 is a further installment of the Gong mythology, the central part of which was formed with the Radio Gnome Trilogy of albums, comprising Flying Teapot in 1973, followed by Angel's Egg, 1973, and You in 1974.

  5. List of Gong band members - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Gong_band_members

    all releases from Angel's Egg (1973) to Gong Live Etc (1977) and from 25th Birthday Party (1995) to Live 2 Infinitea (2000) Live au Bataclan 1973 (1990) Live at Sheffield '74 (1990) Pre-Modernist Wireless: The Peel Sessions (1995) Live in Sherwood Forest '75 (Shamal-Gong) (2005) Gong in the 70s (2006) 2032 (2009)

  6. Camembert Electrique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camembert_Electrique

    Similarly, Gong recorded a completely different song titled "Selene" on the Angel's Egg album. Also, "Wet Cheese Delirium" is misspelled "Delirum", and "And You Tried So Hard" is shortened to "Tried So Hard" on some recent editions. The first and last tracks on each side of the original LP are short collages of sound effects.

  7. Flying Teapot (album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Teapot_(album)

    Subtitled Radio Gnome Invisible, Part 1, it is the first of the Radio Gnome Invisible trilogy of albums, followed by Angel's Egg in December and You the following October. This trilogy forms a central part of the Gong mythology. The Flying Teapot idea itself was influenced by Russell's teapot. [2]

  8. Tim Blake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Blake

    He appears on all three albums of the Radio Gnome Invisible trilogy; Flying Teapot, Angel's Egg, and You, in fact Blake is the only composer, apart from the Allen/Smyth partnership, to have written for all three of the "Trilogy" Albums, making him one of Gong's most important composers. He left Gong in early 1975.

  9. You (Gong album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_(Gong_album)

    It was produced by Simon Heyworth and Gong "under the universal influence of C.O.I.T., the Compagnie d'Opera Invisible de Thibet", and also engineered by Heyworth. You is the third of the "Radio Gnome Invisible" trilogy of albums, following Flying Teapot and Angel's Egg. The trilogy forms a central part of the Gong mythology. The structure of ...