The Alpha Band (album)
The Alpha Band is the debut album by the rock group The Alpha Band, released in 1976. The band was formed in 1976 from the remnants of Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue. The core band members were T-Bone Burnett, Steven Soles and David Mansfield.[3]
The Alpha Band | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1976 | |||
Recorded | by Larry Hirsch on August 19, 20 and 21, 1976 at Paramount Recording Studios, Los Angeles | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Label | Arista | |||
The Alpha Band chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Christgau's Record Guide | B+[2] |
Track listing
Side one
- "Interviews" (T-Bone Burnett, Bob Neuwirth, Larry Poons)
- "Cheap Perfume" (Burnett, Neuwirth, J. Steven Soles)
- "Keep It in the Family" (Soles)
- "Ten Figures" (Burnett, Fleming)
- "Wouldn't You Know" (Soles)
Side two
- "Madman" (Burnett, Soles)
- "The Dogs" (Burnett, Fleming, Phil Taylor)
- "Arizona Telegram" (Soles)
- "Dark Eyes" (Burnett, Fleming)
- "Last Chance to Dance" (Burnett, Carson)
Personnel
- T-Bone Burnett – vocals, guitar, piano
- David Jackson – bass
- David Mansfield – violin, mandolin, guitar
- Matt Betton – drums
- Steven Soles – vocals, guitar
- K.O. Thomas – keyboards on "Keep it in the Family"
- Rosanna Taplin – background vocals, vocal on "The Dogs"
- Roscoe West – background vocals, vocals on "Interviews"
gollark: We just synchronise state over certain backchannels.
gollark: It *is* bee bee apio, yes.
gollark: AQA assembly language is some sort of weird ARM derivative with 13 registers and 1024 words of RAM.
gollark: So the obvious solution is to save time and compile into it.
gollark: We are doing assembly programming in computer science and I dislike their language.
References
- AllMusic review
- CG Book '70s: A
- AllMusic entry for Alpha Band. Accessed May 21, 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.