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Nether Lands is the fourth album by American singer-songwriter Dan Fogelberg, released in 1977. [4] The album title is a play on Nederland, Colorado , the location of one of the studios used to record the album.
Dan Fogelberg was born in Peoria, Illinois.He was the youngest of three sons born to Margaret (née Irvine), (1920–2015), a classically trained pianist, and Lawrence Peter Fogelberg, (1911–1982), a band director at Woodruff High School in Peoria, at Pekin Community High School in Pekin, Illinois, [2] and at Bradley University in Peoria. [3]
This is a detailed discography for American singer songwriter Dan Fogelberg. Six of his solo albums achieved platinum status from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). A collaboration with jazz flutist Tim Weisberg , " Twin Sons of Different Mothers ," also went platinum.
1978 - (w/Dan Fogelberg) Tell Me to My Face/Hurtwood Alley (Full Moon 50605) also released by: UK/Full Moon, Australia & Netherlands/Epic 1979 - (w/Dan Fogelberg) The Power of Gold /Lahaina Luna (Full Moon 50606) also released by: UK/Full Moon, Canada & Japan/Epic
Caribou Ranch was a recording studio built by producer James William Guercio in 1972 in a converted barn on ranch property in the Rocky Mountains near Nederland, Colorado, on the road that leads to the ghost town of Caribou.
Part of the Plan (Dan Fogelberg song) The Power of Gold; R. Run for the Roses (song) S. Same Old Lang Syne; Stars (Dan Fogelberg song) T. To the Morning
Twin Sons of Different Mothers is a collaboration album by American singer-songwriter Dan Fogelberg and jazz flutist Tim Weisberg, released in 1978.It was the first of two collaborations between the pair; the second was No Resemblance Whatsoever.
Fogelberg was born in Gothenburg. His father, a copper-founder, encouraging an early exhibited taste for design, sent him in 1801 to Stockholm , where he studied at the school of art. There he came much under the influence of the sculptor Johan Tobias Sergel , who communicated to him his own enthusiasm for antique art and natural grace.