Everybody's in Show-Biz

Occupation

  • Vocal / Guitar: Ray Davies
  • Guitar / vocals Dave Davies
  • Bass: John Dalton
  • Keyboard: John Gosling
  • Drums: Mick Avory

As well as guest musicians

  • Trumpet: Mike Cotton
  • Trombone / Tuba: John Beecham
  • Organ: Dave Rowberry
  • Baritone Saxophone / Clarinet: Alan Holmes, Dave Jones

Everybody's in Show -Biz is the tenth studio album by British rock group The Kinks. It was recorded in the period from March to June 1972 and published on 25 August 1972 in England. The first two pages of double - LP contains studio recordings, live recordings of pages three and four were taken at City two concerts on 2 and 3 March 1972 in Carnegie Hall in Manhattan in New York - with the band Lindisfarne as the opening act. All the songs included on the studio LP comes from Ray Davies, with the exception of "You Do not Know My Name ", a composition by Ray's brother Dave.

Everybody's in Show -Biz is today often referred to as a transitional album of Kinks viewed. Ray Davies, who wanted to be a theater director during his student days at the Hornsey College of Art in London, the Kinks led away from the rock and beat the sixties inspired from the theater and vaudeville and the music of the 1920s little modern sound world, a topic, where he was to remain for the next years faithful. He told in lyrics full of irony and lyrical sharpness of the consequences of life as a rock star, from the alcohol -laden monotony of touring and the associated excesses.

During their live performances, the Kinks now offered an unusual for a rock band stage spectacle, the songs were staged with numerous guest musicians in the style of a Music Hall performance.

The best-known title of the album, Celluloid Heroes, describes the inhumane manner in which the Hollywood industry builds their stars and they break at the fame during her movie image lives on unchanged.

From the usually the Kinks always well-meaning critics guild publishing this time was assessed only moderately positive, and the sales figures on both sides of the Atlantic were bad, only published on May 5, 1972 single " Supersonic Rocket Ship " reached in England number 16 in the charts.

Title list

Page 1

Page 2

Page 3

Page 4

Studio albums: Kinks (1964 ) | Kinda Kinks (1965 ) | Kinks Kinkdom (1965 ) | Kinks in Germany (1965 ) | The Kink Kontroversy (1965 ) | Well Respected Kinks (1966 ) | Face to Face (1966 ) | Something Else by The Kinks (1967 ) | Sunny Afternoon (1967 ) | The Kinks Are the Village Green Preservation Society (1968 ) | Arthur ( Or the Decline and fall of the British Empire ) (1969 ) | Lola versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One ( 1970) | Percy - Original soundtrack ( 1971) | Muswell Hillbillies (1971 ) | Everybody's in Show -Biz (1972 ) | Preservation Act 1 (1973 ) | Preservation Act 2 (1974 ) | Soap Opera (1975 ) | Schoolboys in Disgrace ( 1976) | Sleepwalker (1977 ) | Misfits (1978 ) | low Budget (1979 ) | Give the People What They Want (1981 ) | State of Confusion (1983 ) | Word of Mouth (1984 ) | Come Dancing with The Kinks (1986 ) | Think Visual (1987 ) | UK Jive (1989 ) | Phobia (1993 ) | To the Bone ( British version, 1994) | To the Bone ( U.S. version) (1996 ) | BBC Sessions (2001)

  • The- Kinks album
  • Album ( rock )
  • Album 1972
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