[Review] Bryan Ferry: These Foolish Things (1973)
Ferry turns his revolutionary eye to rock & roll classics and performs them in his own particular, aagh, idiom.
Ferry turns his revolutionary eye to rock & roll classics and performs them in his own particular, aagh, idiom.
The third album solidifies around Bryan Ferry’s romantic persona, mixing torch songs with compressed helium in a can.
Blah, blah, blah… you’re not even reading this, are you?
The album that launched a dozen Manzanera solo records, featuring the members of Roxy Music and Matching Mole.
A culmination of their commercial tendencies, and a lesson on the importance of leaving on a high note.
A collection of live performances through the years, siren songs of haunted dreams from the past.
Re-makes of Roxy songs make this his most appealing solo record to date, but the remodeled covers are equally rousing.
The debut album from one of the last great progressive supergroups, featuring members of King Crimson, Soft Machine and Roxy Music.
The group slims down to a trio and fattens up their sound with another classic album to stave off prog’s winter.
A color-coded concept album of a dystopian world where everything is green and everyone plays the Yamaha CS-80.
Eddie Jobson gets a new toy for Christmas (the Synclavier) and we get a new album of new age instrumentals.