Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BananamourBananamour - Wikipedia

    Bananamour is the fourth studio album by Kevin Ayers and it featured some of his most accessible recordings, including "Shouting in a Bucket Blues" and his whimsical tribute to Syd Barrett, "Oh! Wot A Dream".

  2. A lo largo de nueve temas, el genial inglés nos presenta a íconos de la experimentación que incluyen a Steve Hillage, Mike Ratledge y Robert Wyatt, estos dos últimos compañeros de Kevin en la superlativa Soft Machine junto a Daevid Allen.

  3. Kevin Ayers ‘Bananamour’ Harvest 1973, LP version. ‘Bananamour’ is the fourth studio album by Kevin Ayers and it features some of his most accessible recordings, including ‘Shouting in a Bucket Blues’ (featuring Steve Hillage on guitar) and his charming tribute to Syd Barrett, ‘Oh! Wot A Dream’.

  4. www.rhino.com › aod › bananamour-kevin-ayersBananamour | Rhino

    1 de may. de 2018 · Gong guitarist Steve Hillage and former bandmates Mike Ratledge and Robert Wyatt can all be heard here, while a couple of Ayers' other musical friends helped inspire songs: Syd Barrett (single “Oh! Wot A Dream”) and Nico (the ethereal epic “Decadence”).

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Kevin_AyersKevin Ayers - Wikipedia

    Ayers and Wyatt left the Wilde Flowers, and eventually joined keyboardist Mike Ratledge and guitarist Daevid Allen to form Soft Machine. Ayers switched to bass (and later both guitar and bass following Allen's departure from that group) and shared vocals with the drummer Robert Wyatt.

  6. 21 de feb. de 2013 · “Yes, we have no mañanas (so get your mañanas today)” (1976) marca el fin de una era para Ayers, que no se reencontrará consigo mismo hasta “Dejà Vu” (1984). Los ochenta y sus vaivenes extra-musicales, de todos modos, no le sentaron demasiado bien a este outsider natural.

  7. Kevin Ayers’ last LP for the prog-oriented Harvest label, Bananamour isn’t as far out and cerebral as 1970’s Shooting At The Moon or as wonderfully weird as 1969’s Joy Of A Toy, but it has more hits than misses and it contains perhaps the founding Soft Machine member’s greatest composition.