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63 articles found. Page 3 of 4.
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Sex, Drugs And Violence In Rock: The Sexual Language Of Rock Part 2
Essay by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 6 March 1976
"I'm gonna pick you up nowAnd carry you away,So you'd better pack up now, baby,Packin' up today,Here I come, just a big bad man,When I ...
Ian Hunter: An American Alien Boy
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 15 May 1976
THERE EXISTS A subtle difference between a tax exile and an expatriate. ...
Bob Marley & the Wailers: Hammersmith Odeon, London
Live Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 26 June 1976
RIOTS LAST NIGHT they said, marauding hordes of smart, mean kids swarming around getting illegal all over the place with property and the concession stands ...
Live Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 11 September 1976
Our Islington correspondent mingles with the Sex Pistols' portable audience looking for Johnny Rotten's toof. It's incisive stuff… ...
The Bay City Rollers: The View From Seat A6
Live Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 25 September 1976
"Then one day I found a perfect plan,I shake my ass and sing in a rock and roll band,From now on there'll be no compromisin'Rock ...
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 22 January 1977
AND YOU'RE profile to profile with The Man Who Fell To Bits. Against an incandescent orange background, the cover of David Bowie's new album reprises ...
Ian Hunter: What A Hunter He Turned Out To Be
Interview by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 14 May 1977
ONE THING YOU GOTTA HAND to Ian Hunter: the old bastard knows how to make an entrance. ...
The Sex Pistols: The Social Rehabilitation of the Sex Pistols
Report and Interview by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 6 August 1977
THE PROSPEROUS CYBORGS at the next table in the backroom of this expensive Stockholm eating-place are sloshing down their coffee as fast as they possibly ...
Retrospective by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 21 January 1978
The Department of Cryptic Headlines presents a retrospective view of THE WHO's Quadrophenia, noting that Mr Pete Townshend's Mod vision is as valid now as ...
Willie Alexander and the Boom Boom Band: Willie Alexander and the Boom Boom Band
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 21 January 1978
AND WELCOME back the Bosstown Sound! That's Boston USA, spelled B-O-S-S-T-O-W-N, home of the J. Geils Band, Aerosmith, The Modern Lovers (sort of) and now…Willie ...
Interview by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 11 February 1978
What do all these bands have in common? ANSWER: They're all EDDIE AND THE HOTRODS, slidin' on the moment and trying not to fall off. ...
Howard Devoto, Magazine: Magazine: Howard Devoto's Enigma Variations
Profile and Interview by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 25 February 1978
HOWARD DEVOTO gives good face. Unlined and triangular, topped with a vast expanse of forehead; the kind that popular folklore maintains is the unmistakeable dead-giveaway ...
Elvis Costello: Holocaust In Microcosm
Report by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 18 March 1978
"HEY ELVIIIIIS!!!" There's this blonde gumdrop down the front, see, shaking it down in that demure stoned way that hippie girls seem to favour, and ...
Interview by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 18 March 1978
EVERYONE GETS that glazed marzipan look in make-up. Maybe it's some weird chemical that they put in the booze in the Artists' Bar at Television ...
The Clash, Suicide: The Clash, Suicide: The Music Machine, London
Live Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 5 August 1978
TIME HAS come today. Third of four Music Machine gigs and surprise! the ritual bottling of Suicide appears to have been omitted for ...
Profile and Interview by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 23 September 1978
Mister DAVE 'Are You Sure Chuck Played It Thaat Way?' EDMUNDS, the celebrated Welsh lickologist, persevered and learned those classic solos note for note. So ...
Kate Bush: The Palladium, London
Live Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 28 April 1979
TWO MEMORIES: recalled first are the days when rock and roll was swamped with failed classical pianists and violinists who knew that they could make ...
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 28 April 1979
AH, THE BELLS, the bells…somehow I don't think this is what Victor Hugo had in mind all those years ago. However, what Slick Vic had ...
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 6 September 1980
AH, THE shimmering dust-free corridors, the pleasure machines, the limitless possibilities opened up by microtechnology, the disturbing effects of cybernetic leisure upon the fragile human ...
David Bowie: Scary Monsters (RCA)
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 20 September 1980
LEARNING to live with somebody's depression: the man in the clown suit stops running, finds self in back-against-wall situation, attempts to deal with same. Scary ...
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