Bad Company
Can t Get Enough (Single Edit)(2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Bad Company (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Movin On (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Ready For Love (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Easy On My Soul (Previously Unreleased Version) (Bad Company)
Good Lovin Gone Bad (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Feel Like Makin Love (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Shooting Star (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Weep No More (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
See The Sunlight (Previously Unreleased Version) (Bad Company)
Live For The Music (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Simple Man (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Honey Child (2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Run With the Pack (Single Edit)(2015 Remastered Version) (Bad Company)
Jimmy Page Year-by-Year: Photos 1963-2020
We re looking at the life of Jimmy Page with pictures of the Led Zeppelin legend from 1963 up until the present day.
Raised in the London suburbs, Page began playing guitar at the age of 12, entranced, like many budding British musicians of the day, by skiffle, rockabilly and the blues. He d gotten enough experience playing in local bands that, by the age of 15, Page quit school to focus on music and, as a member of Neil Christian and the Crusaders, played on their 1962 single The Road to Love when he was only 18.
But a bout with mononucleosis took him off the road, and he enrolled in art school, which led him into the London blues scene. Page soon found himself in bands with names like Carter-Lewis and the Southerners and Mickey Finn and the Blue Men, but more importantly, he began to make a name for himself as a session guitarist. He played on early tracks by the Kinks, the Who and Van Morrison s first group, Them.
Jimmy Page Year-by-Year: Photos 1963-2020
We re looking at the life of Jimmy Page with pictures of the Led Zeppelin legend from 1963 up until the present day.
Raised in the London suburbs, Page began playing guitar at the age of 12, entranced, like many budding British musicians of the day, by skiffle, rockabilly and the blues. He d gotten enough experience playing in local bands that, by the age of 15, Page quit school to focus on music and, as a member of Neil Christian and the Crusaders, played on their 1962 single The Road to Love when he was only 18.
But a bout with mononucleosis took him off the road, and he enrolled in art school, which led him into the London blues scene. Page soon found himself in bands with names like Carter-Lewis and the Southerners and Mickey Finn and the Blue Men, but more importantly, he began to make a name for himself as a session guitarist. He played on early tracks by the Kinks, the Who and Van Morrison s first group, Them.
News from the courts
A businessman has been fined £700 after admitting threatening behaviour during the test drive of a Bentley.
Richard Malcolm Powell, aged 60, of Lhergy Cripperty, Union Mills, was arrested after an incident at Island Tyres and Exhaust on South Quay in Douglas.
Charges of driving while disqualified and a section 2 offence against him were withdrawn.
Prosecuting advocate Barry Swain told the court that Powell went to Jackson’s car salesroom on July 16.
He wanted to test drive the Bentley but asked a member of staff there to drive it for him as he was disqualified at the time.
The Musicians Who Demanded Trump Stop Playing Their Music in 2020
28 Dec 2020
This year, President Donald Trump was confronted by more than a dozen musicians and bands with demands that he stop using their music at his rallies and events.
The attacks by left-wing artists and other apolitical musicians started the minute Trump began holding rallies after he came down from Trump Tower to announce he was running for president in June of 2015. Before that year closed, then candidate Trump was assailed by rock star Steven Tyler and his band, Aerosmith, for using songs including “Dream On,” and “Living on the Edge.” But the hits just kept on rolling with artists including Adele, Bruce Springsteen, Elton John, Neil Young, and even representatives for the Beatles, all of whom demanded that Trump pull their music from his events.