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Search results for 'the and osmonds'
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Ink 19 :: Donny Osmond
Somewhere In Time (Decca). Review by Ben Varkentine.
DONNY OSMOND SOMEWHERE IN TIME Decca Somewhere around the late '90s, I started to develop what I have to call a sneaking little respect for Donny Osmond. I did not buy any of his records, but I did catch that VH-1 Behind The Music and other biographies, and the odd bit here and there of the new Donny ...
Ink 19 :: Music Suicide Hotline
December 1997 :: Feature :: Music Suicide Hotline (Selkow van Urine)
Hanson by Selkow van Urine Despite what the revisionist music historians would have us believe, the years between 1970 and 1980 comprised possibly the greatest decade for "pop" music ever. "Pop" meaning what I think the readers of Ink Nineteen are listening to. Considering that reviews for the works ...
Ink 19 :: The Cowsills
The Best of The Cowsills: The Millennium Collection (Universal). Review by Gail Worley.
THE COWSILLS THE BEST OF THE COWSILLS: THE MILLENNIUM COLLECTION Universal One of the true pioneers of the where-are-they-now phenomenon, The Cowsills were a Rhode Island family comprised of a mom, five brothers and a sister, who in the late '60s predated The Osmonds and The Jackson Five as America ...
Ink 19 :: Johnny Marr
"Melodic with a touch of groove and an anemic, very white approach to the vocals, but still soulful." Gail Worley talks to Johnny Marr, currently of The Healers and formerly of the Smiths, and manages to keep it together. Mostly.
THE BOY WITH THE THORN IN HIS SIDE: AN INTERVIEW WITH JOHNNY MARR by Gail Worley To every curmudgeonly rock critic who claims that Boomslang, the debut album by former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr and his new band, The Healers, lacks originality, Marr would probably respond by saying something like ...
Ink 19 :: That's Not Metal!
August 1999 :: Features :: That's Not Metal! (David Lee Beowulf)
THAT'S NOT METAL! by David Lee Beowulf About a hundred years ago Richard Strauss wrote the theme to 2001:A Space Odyssey and Tchaikovsky wrote The Nutcracker and Americans were digging "She'll Be Comin' 'Round the Mountain." Between 1900 and 1950 we'd passed through Ravel's Bolero , Disney's Fantasia ...
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