Duane Eddy, a legend in London (2018)
, 2018 - legendary guitarist Duane Eddy and the Richard Hawley band plus Imelda May and Richard Hawley as guests perform at Palladium in London
, 2018 - legendary guitarist Duane Eddy and the Richard Hawley band plus Imelda May and Richard Hawley as guests perform at Palladium in London
May 24, 2012 - legendary American artist Duane Eddy sings and plays guitar at the Cheese And Grain in Frome, Somerset UK
Strawberry Switchblade, The Art of Noise, Culture Club, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, Big Country, Freur, XTC, Men At Work, Billy Joel, Mike Oldfield, Queen, David Essex
>> EN FRANCAIS | >> EN ESPAÑOLTODAY We Listen To Robert Plant, Alison Krauss, Basia, Derek and the Dominos, Eric Clapton, Al Green, Robbie Williams, Focus, Art Blakey, PJ Harvey, My Chemical Romance, Joanna…
>> EN FRANCAIS | >> EN ESPAÑOLTODAY We Listen To Talking Heads, Anita Baker, Rihanna, Steve Miller, PJ Harvey, Beastie Boys, John Coltrane, Eliane Elias We Celebrate Christian McBride, Johnnie Taylor We Watch Buckethead,…
May 31, 2017 - (only if you have won a ticket!), Dan Auerbach has invited Jerry Douglas, Duane Eddy and many other musicians for a private concert marking the release…
>> EN FRANCAIS | >> EN ESPAÑOLTODAY We Listen To Katie Melua, En Vogue, David Bowie, Sleater-Kinney, Small Faces, Travis, Common, Orbital, Sonny Rollins, Herbie Hancock We Celebrate Bob Dylan, Patti Labelle, Archie Shepp,…
Tori Amos’s “Caught a Lite Sneeze” fuses harpsichord melodies with mid-‘90s alt-rock grit, while R.E.M.’s “Lotus” dabbles in experimental vibes post-Bill Berry. Live’s “Lightning Crashes” captures loss and renewal, contrasting Nirvana’s introspective “All Apologies.” U2 delivers bittersweet vulnerability in “Stay (Faraway, So Close!),” and Depeche Mode’s “Where’s the Revolution” merges synth-driven frustration with quiet defiance. Sting’s “All This Time” blends folk, jazz, and pop-rock in a poignant tribute, and Fish’s “Credo” ties Celtic influences to societal critique. Meanwhile, The The’s “Dogs of Lust” layers bluesy seduction, and Dreadzone’s “Little Britain” crafts a dub-reggae-electronic collage rich with historical samples—all sticking out in their respective lanes.