Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Just after the first album's release, the group added singer/guitarist/composer Bob Yeazel, who’d previously played in Denver psych band Beast with Kenny Passarelli. The group recorded two albums with famed Buddy Holly producer Norman Petty. Yeazel was also a member of Superband with Jimmy Greenspoon, who would go on to join Three Dog Night.

  2. 4 de out. de 2023 · Bob Yeazel "Can't Let You Go" from the "Things Are Getting Better" cd available on ITunes and Amazon

    • 4 min
    • 701
    • fatboy records
  3. Guitarist/songwriter Bob Yeazel joined the Denver-based band Sugarloaf for its second album, Spaceship Earth, in 1971; he wrote or co-wrote many of the tunes, including “Tongue in Cheek” which peaked at #55 on the Billboard Hot 100). He had previously played on two albums as part of a Colorado band called the Beast.

  4. 16 de jun. de 2016 · I’m so sad to report that today Bob died. He was an amazing man, father, guitar player, songwriter, showman, bandleader and friend. For those who know CD & Kings music he wrote “Beat Up Subaru” and “Nobody Knows” that the Kings recorded…and he is in the Colorado Music Hall of Fame for his years with Sugarloaf … and he ...

  5. From "Things Are Getting Better" Bob Yeazel's Every Man Hears Different Music. The ability to write something this great, is something I admire above all! I'...

    • 4 min
    • 1110
    • fatboy records
  6. After “Green-Eyed Lady” peaked on the charts, Sugarloaf added singer, guitarist and composer Bob Yeazel for an adventurous second album, Spaceship Earth, and continued touring for 18 months. At some point the song “Communication”—credited to Yeazel, Ron Morgan and Jimmy Greenspoon (of Three Dog Night)—was recorded but never released.

  7. Beast. Beast premiered in 1968 at the Kelker Junction in Colorado Springs, where the septet was based for a time. Members included Bob Yeazel on lead guitar and Kenny Passarelli on bass for the first of its two albums, Beast, which charted for two weeks in late 1969, peaking at #195.