Billy Joel Live At Shea Stadium

Filmed at the MEN Arena in Manchester on December 16th 2011, this stunning Duran Duran live show is the perfect combination of great music, amazing visuals and iconic style which has been the band’s trademark throughout their career. Following the release of their acclaimed “All You Need Is Now” album, this concert combines new songs from that release with their classic hits. Whether in the studio or the live arena, Duran Duran are masters of their craft and this latest concert bursts with energy and oozes class in the way that only they can. Known for his solo hits in the 1980s as well as his hits with the band Smokie in the '70s, Chris Norman is a British soft rock singer with an international following whose career spans several decades. Born on October 25, 1950, in Redcar, North Yorkshire, England, he began his musical career in the band Smokie.

Billy Joel Live At Shea Stadium

Originally founded in 1965, the band changed its name several times before ultimately deciding upon Smokie in the mid-'70s. Comprised of Alan Silson (lead guitar, vocals), Terry Uttley (bass, vocals), and Pete Spencer (drums), in addition to Norman (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Smokie made their album debut in 1975 with Pass It Around.

Their second album, Changing All the Time (1975), broke them into the pop mainstream not only in the United Kingdom but also in parts of Western Europe, where the album's single, 'If You Think You Know How to Love Me,' was a Top Ten hit. Subsequent albums Midnight Cafe (1976), Bright Lights and Back Alleys (1977), and The Montreux Album (1978) were also international hits. Moreover, Norman scored an international Top Ten hit single in 1978 with 'Stumblin' In,' a duet with Suzi Quatro. Alexander Dawn Of An Empire.

Watch the full video of Billy Joel in Live at Shea Stadium, or preview it for free.

As Smokie's popularity trailed off around the turn of the decade, Norman split from the band and made his solo album debut in 1982 with Rock Away Your Teardrops. While his debut album was fairly unsuccessful, his second full-length effort, Some Hearts Are Diamonds (1986), was another story, spawning the international Top Ten smash hit single 'Midnight Lady.' Norman's popularity was greatest in Germany, where he racked up several additional hits during the late '80s, among them 'No Arms Can Ever Hold You,' 'Sarah (You Take My Breath Away),' and 'Broken Heroes.' While Norman released a new album every couple years from the mid-'80s onward, his popularity waned in the '90s, and not until after the turn of the century did he start hitting the charts again. Armed with a piano and his distinct voice, pop rocker Bruce Hornsby became a Grammy winner and double-platinum selling artist with songs like “The Way It Is.” Known for the spontaneity and creativity of his live performances, Hornsby draws frequently from Popular Classical music, Jazz, Folk, Rhythm & Blues, Rock, Blues, and Jam Band musical traditions, while seamlessly blending and improvising. He also collaborated with the Grateful Dead and was a part time member of the band during the early nineties.

For this October 1995 concert, filmed at the Manhattan Center in New York, Hornsby is joined on stage by such special- guests as Bonnie Raitt, Pat Metheny, Bob Weir (Grateful Dead), and Don Henley (The Eagles). The set list includes “The End of the Innocence,” a tune co-penned by Hornsby and Henley, which became a massive hit for Henley. With their stadium rock riffs and anthem choruses, Chicago-based Fall Out Boy offers up unparalleled energy in this Soundstage set. Vocalist/guitarist Patrick Stump, bassist Pete Wentz, drummer Andy Hurley and guitarist Joe Trohman make up the perfect pop punk quartet. Amidst bass twirling, drum solos, and roaring power chords, Stump delivers strong vocals from start to finish, ricocheting to falsetto and back on recent hits “America’s Suitehearts” and “I Don’t Care.” Other show highlights include “Dance, Dance,” “Sugar We’re Goin Down,” and “Thnks fr the Mmrs.”. Windows Xp Sp3 Ghost Tiger V3.iso. A jazz chanteuse with a taste for pop, country, and blues at their best, Norah Jones became an overnight sensation in 2002 with the release of her album Come Away With Me, which earned both critical acclaim and blockbuster sales. In 2004, Jones was touring in support of her well-received second album, Feels Like Home, when she and her band arrived at Nashville's historic Ryman Auditorium for a special concert appearance, which was captured by a camera crew for home-video release.

This entry was posted on 12/21/2017.