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Bobby Womack: Hammersmith Odeon, London
Live Review by Cliff White, NME, 20 March 1976
POLE-AXED BY SKIN-CRAWLING hot and cold flushes, with a head full of demented panel-beaters, the last thing I wanted to do was travel 50 miles ...
Review by Cliff White, NME, 27 March 1976
IF YOU WANT to do Bobby Womack a favour, you'll ignore this album. ...
Bobby Womack: I Can Understand It
Review by Bob Fisher, NME, 22 February 1975
CALLED IN America Greatest Hits, this album simply illustrates the unsatisfactory position that Bobby Womack finds himself in in England. Hitless. ...
Bobby Womack - I Don't Know What The World Is Coming To
Review by Ian MacDonald, NME, 26 July 1975
FROM 1964, FOLLOWING the death of his mentor Sam Cooke, to 1969, when he finally began to record under his own name, Bobby Womack was ...
Bobby Womack: BLAM! Bobby Womack Calls The Shots
Interview by Cliff White, NME, 27 March 1976
CLIFF WHITE hits the floor and runs the tape as the soul veteran pulls the trigger. ...
Bobby Womack: The Poet II (Beverly Glen import)
Review by Richard Cook, NME, 24 March 1984
AN OLD-FASHIONED man in the midst of a booming, disordered black music, Bobby Womack's journeyman career comes to a glorious peak with The Poet II. ...
Review by Barney Hoskyns, NME, 26 June 1982
TWO SOUL products from the mainstream, one of which, The Poet, has been on import since last year, the other being the latest album from ...
Report by Nick Kent, NME, 12 April 1975
...in a tune-up room on the last night of the Faces' 1975 LA gigs? Why, the closing aria in D from 'il Cavalleria Rusticana', of ...
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 19 July 1975
MY H.A.L. PRINT-OUT on Ron Wood sez that his guitar-playing veers from the sublime to the ridiculous (i.e., his playing on Rod Stewart's solo albums ...
Review by Cliff White, NME, 24 April 1976
THAT THIS ALBUM has already been such an overwhelming success in America must surely be due to US Columbia's marketing techniques rather than the music, ...
Sam Cooke: The Man And His Music
Review by Andy Gill, NME, 26 April 1986
I SUPPOSE any Sam Cooke record is a gift from God, even an LP which fundamentally belies its title in the way this album does. ...
The Rolling Stones: Dirty Work
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 29 March 1986
IN THE 1970s, The Rolling Stones were a distinctly unlovely proposition: fronted by a jet-setter and a junkie and churning out a series of tedious ...
Review by Barney Hoskyns, NME, 12 June 1982
Various Artists: Lost Soul, Vols. 1-3 (Epic, import) ...
Johnny Marr: What Is Johnny Marr Playing At?
Report by Len Brown, NME, 27 May 1989
SINCE THE SMITHS split in 1987, MORRISSEY has gone on to bigger if not necessarily better things, while JOHNNY MARR has been living the 'have ...
Keith Richards, The Rolling Stones: Keith Richards: An English Werewolf in London
Interview by Mat Snow, NME, 22 February 1986
WHAT BECOMES a legend most? So exactly how I'd imagined it was the scene that I wouldn't have dared make it up. Before we enter, ...
Black Grape: Pips Out For The Lads
Interview by Paul Moody, NME, 3 June 1995
If you expected old fruit SHAUN RYDER to come back as reconstructed new man you were pissing in the wind. PAUL MOODY discovers that the ...
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