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259 articles found. Page 5 of 13.
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Lou Reed at the Hammersmith Odeon
Live Review by Max Bell, NME, 5 April 1975
THERE'S AN ILLUMINATED sign outside the Hammersmith Odeon that says: "It's all too much. Lou Reed in Concert." Wry humour or someone taking a subtle ...
Ian Hunter, Mick Ronson: Hunter Ronson at Hammersmith Odeon
Live Review by Chris Salewicz, NME, 12 April 1975
SHUCKS. TO THINK it's well over a year now since I last saw Ian Hunter and the whole Hoople caboodle in this very same theatre ...
Steve Harley at the Hammersmith Odeon
Live Review by Max Bell, NME, 19 April 1975
INSIDE THE HALL you could tell it would be one of those nights. Row upon row of bowler-hatted disciples clutched onto their Harley scarves in ...
Allen Toussaint: Southern Nights
Review by Ian MacDonald, NME, 26 April 1975
IF ALLEN TOUSSAINT ever wants to make the great album he's obviously capable of, he'd be best advised to first take a year's sabbatical from ...
Pete Atkin And Clive James: From Little Atkins Great Oak Trees Grow
Interview by Ian MacDonald, NME, 26 April 1975
A fearsome encounter between two of the foremost minds of a Generation...uh...two of the most cerebral Rock Critics afloat...um, two of the most Accomplished Raconteurs...the ...
The Pink Fairies: Looking Back
Retrospective by Mick Farren, NME, 26 April 1975
A thrilling tale of Ladbroke Grove, loose aggregations, hanging out, and falling about recounted in loving detail by an actual participant in those glorious ...
Mickey Jupp: The Lost Legends of Southend Rock
Profile and Interview by Max Bell, NME, 3 May 1975
Down where the fag-end of London slopes into the sea, there lies the forgotten land of Southend, home of the whelk stall and source of ...
Iggy Pop, The Stooges: Iggy Pop: The Mighty Pop vs. the Hand of Blight
Special Feature by Nick Kent, NME, 3 May 1975
Never before told! The story of a brilliant monster called IGGY POP, whose life and countless near-demises have provided Rock with one of its most ...
Review by Max Bell, NME, 14 June 1975
UNLESS PAVLOV'S DOG prove to be a figment of Sandy Pearlman's crazed imagination, then their debut album must make them great white hopes for the ...
The Rolling Stones - Made in the Shade and Metamorphosis
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 28 June 1975
ECONOMICS: When a famous big-time rock and roll band reaches that particular special point in its year when it's time to pack the clean socks ...
Profile and Interview by Steve Turner, NME, 2 August 1975
"Marty Wilde was managed by Larry Parnes 'They don't call me Parnes, shillings and pence for nothing' who entered rock as Tommy Steele's ...
David Bowie: Did We Use Him? Did We Abuse Him?
Essay by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 2 August 1975
Well, he's acting like we did, so maybe there's something in it. Two recent and much-maligned Bowie albums are herein re-evaluated for your reading pleasure... ...
Live Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 9 August 1975
THE FIRST THING that hits you when you see Be-Bop Deluxe in their current incarnation (or, for that matter, listen to said incarnation's Futurama album ...
Stevie Wonder - Blind, Gifted and Loaded
Report by Bob Woffinden, NME, 23 August 1975
THERE HAS BEEN an official silence about Stevie Wonder's plans since he publicly announced in March last year that he was to retire in 1976 ...
Interview by Vivien Goldman, NME, 20 September 1975
"ANYONE WHO KNOWS my work" said Bob Calvert earnestly, "would realise that however bad they might think it is, it's all intentional." ...
The Sensational Alex Harvey Band: Alex Harvey: Delivered From The Jaws Of Death
Report by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 20 September 1975
...We proudly present the intrepid ALEX HARVEY, fresh from being restrained from swimming in the shark tank and currently engaged in entertaining the young people ...
David Bowie: Station To Station
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 10 January 1976
"A sixty thousand word novel is one image corrected fifty-nine thousand, nine hundred and ninety-nine times" Samuel R. Delaney ...
Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 24 January 1976
ARGUABLY, THERE IS no more exciting rock artist to listen to than one whose time has come; one whose art (not to mention attitude, appearance, ...
Sweet: The Sweet: Top of the Pops
Interview by Chris Salewicz, NME, 31 January 1976
OH, YOU know, it gets so very confusing. What with the fickleness of all these rock writers and the constant need to come across with ...
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