Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 11 de may. de 2024 · Dwight Twilley, the singer/songwriter who helped bring the Tulsa Sound to a wider audience, has died at 72. No cause or other details have been revealed. Twilley was best known for the Top 20 hit singles I’m on Fire (1975) and Girls (1984). He performed with the Dwight Twilley Band with Phil Seymour until 1978, when he went off as ...

  2. Hace 4 días · Apr 9, 2011. Bill Pitcock IV, a guitarist and 45-year veteran of the Tulsa music scene, died Friday at a Tulsa hospital of complications from cancer. He was 58. Pitcock, who was best known for his...

  3. 6 de may. de 2024 · The exact reason for Dwight Twilleys death has not been made public. There has been no information released about the circumstances surrounding his death. This has created an air of mystery and intrigue among followers and admirers as they try to comprehend the circumstances surrounding his death.

  4. Bands you feel are closest to Teenage Fanclub, particularly Gerard Love’s songs. Been a huge TFC fan for the longest time, and particularly Gerard love’s songs (including lightships). As part of my wind down I play a playlist with all his songs and some other TFC songs. Just looking for some recommendations of artists I may not have considered.

  5. Hace 17 horas · Initially, the iconic guitar riff in "Breakdown," crafted by Heartbreaker Mike Campbell, was reserved for the song's conclusion, but singer Dwight Twilley, known for his 1975 hit "I'm On Fire," suggested integrating it throughout the track. Petty embraced the idea and summoned the band to the studio in the dead of night for a re-recording session.

  6. 11 de may. de 2024 · Petty wasn’t one to waste time if he didn’t need to, and it wasn’t until he got a visit from Dwight Twilley. According to Petty, the country singer was the one who suggested the song’s iconic guitar lick, telling Classic Rock Stories , “Right in the fade-out of the song, [Mike] Campbell plays [the lick].

  7. Hace 2 días · Evidentemente, comparten espacio con algunos de los nombres sagrados del género, como Raspberries, The Rubinoos, Big Star, Cheap Trick, The Nerves o Dwight Twilley (una canción suya da nombre al disco), pero es que su omisión sí llamaría demasiado la atención.