This page will contain external links about Tony Bennett, as they become available.Tony BennettTony Bennett (born August 13, 1926 in Astoria, New York, United States) is a jazz and pop music singer. He was born Anthony Dominick Benedetto. Some of his best-known songs include:
In 2002 Q magazine named Tony Bennett in their list of the "50 Bands To See Before You Die". For his contribution to the recording industry, Tony Bennett has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1560 Vine Street. DiscographyThis page about Tony Bennett includes information from a Wikipedia article. Additional articles about Tony Bennett News stories about Tony Bennett External links for Tony Bennett Videos for Tony Bennett Wikis about Tony Bennett Discussion Groups about Tony Bennett Blogs about Tony Bennett Images of Tony Bennett |
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He was born Anthony Dominick Benedetto. (According to indie lore, Radiohead listened to C'mon Kids while recording OK Computer, and were inspired to make their classic more experimental.) Although the singles charted, the band were soon a cult favourite once again. Tony Bennett (born August 13, 1926 in Astoria, New York, United States) is a jazz and pop music singer. The Boos were quickly tagged a Britpop band, and they responded in 1996 with C'mon Kids, featuring what some believe to be some of the most challenging and innovative music, indie or otherwise, of the 1990s. "Steppin' Out with My Baby". Their fourth album, Wake Up (1995), was catchy, but still featured imaginative arrangements, sophisticated songwriting, and esoteric songs like "Martin, Doom! It's Seven O' Clock". "What Is This Thing Called Love". But the press agreed that the band had not sold out, but simply evolved a pop sensibility which had always been present in their music. "Stranger in Paradise". This changed when the band made an exciting bid for mainstream success with the euphoric "Wake Up Boo!" This perfect pop song scored a Top 10 position in the UK charts, and the Boos were big. "Rags to Riches". Despite massive critical acclaim and a cult fanbase, the Boo Radleys were still largely unknown to the general public by the time that Britpop broke through in 1995. "I Left My Heart In San Francisco". The album takes his title from the John Coltrane opus, of which Carr is a big fan. The album was received rapturously: picking Giant Steps as their Album of the Year, Select magazine described it as 'an intentional masterpiece'. The record is infectiously catchy and melodic; kaleidescopic in texture; eclectic –– the second track on the record launches straight into a convincing dub pastiche; and at over an hour in length, one of the most ambitious indie records ever made. But no-one was prepared for the Boo's 1993 disc, the magnificent Giant Steps. The record was immediately praised by critics and fans alike as a development and refinement of the group's sound. Almost immediately after the release of the Every Heaven EP in 1991, Rough Trade collapsed and the Boo Radleys had to move to Creation Records for the release of Everything's Alright Forever in 1992. It scraped the bottom of the UK charts, and the Boo Radleys were signed to Rough Trade Records. Although essentially a shoegazing record, influenced by My Bloody Valentine and Dinosaur Jr, the album was an underground hit. In 1990, the Boos (as they are fondly known to fans) released Ichabod and I on a small British indie label. Singer/guitarist Sice, guitarist/songwriter Martin Carr, and bassist Timothy Brown originally enjoyed the company of drummer Steve Hewitt, but he was replaced by Rob Cieka after the release of the band's first record. The Boo Radleys were formed in Liverpool, England in 1988. The band split in 1999, and fans believe that the group remains one of the most underrated bands of the past 15 years. The Boo Radleys were a British guitar band of the 1990s who made experimental indie music, and were briefly associated with the Britpop movement. |