
Stephen Stills
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 80 |
Web site | www.stephenstills.com |
Born | Dallas |
Texas | |
United States | |
Children | Chris Stills |
Jen Stills | |
Justin Stills | |
Henry Stills | |
Oliver Ragland | |
Eleanor Stills | |
Spouse | Kristen Stills |
Véronique Sanson | |
Music groups | Crosby, Stills & Nash |
Buffalo Springfield | |
Manassas | |
The Rides | |
Movies/Shows | Legends of the Canyon: Classic Artists |
CSNY/Déjà Vu | |
Stephen Stills & Manassas: Live | |
The Best of MusikLaden: Stephen Stills & Manassas | |
Official site | stephenstills.com |
Listen artist | www.youtube.com |
Date of birth | January 3,1945 |
Zodiac sign | Capricorn |
Groups | Buffalo Springfield |
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young | |
Parents | William Stills |
Taletha Stills | |
Songs | For What It's WorthBuffalo Springfield · 1966 Suite: Judy Blue EyesCrosby, Stills & Nash · 1969 Love The One You're WithStephen Stills · 1970 View 25+ more |
Albums | Manassas |
Stephen Stills 2 | |
Super Session | |
Stills | |
List | For What It's WorthBuffalo Springfield · 1966 |
Suite: Judy Blue EyesCrosby, Stills & Nash · 1969 | |
Love The One You're WithStephen Stills · 1970 | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 410409 |
Stephen Stills Life story
Stephen Arthur Stills is an American musician, singer, and songwriter best known for his work with Buffalo Springfield, Crosby, Stills & Nash, and Manassas. As both a solo act and member of three successful bands, Stills has combined record sales of over 35 million albums.
The Isley Brothers founder Rudolph Isley dies at 84

... In 1969, they scored a major hit with It s Your Thing and started covering rock anthems like Stephen Stills Love The One You re With and Bob Dylan s Lay Lady Lay...
Henry Diltz: Rock's 'accidental photographer' wins lifetime achievement prize

... " Then one day, I happen to bump into Stephen Stills and he said, Hey, Buffalo Springfield is going to this folk club by the beach for a soundcheck...
Grammys 2022: Early awards for Joni Mitchell and Bo Burnham

... Herbie Hancock, Cyndi Lauper, Angelique Kidjo and Stephen Stills were among those paying tribute to her music; with Graham Nash playing an emotional version of her folk-rock classic A Case Of You...
The Isley Brothers founder Rudolph Isley dies at 84
By Mark SavageBBC Music Correspondent
Rudolph Isley, whose smooth vocals graced Isley Brothers hits like Summer Breeze and That Lady , has died at the Age Of 84.
The musician, who also co-wrote many of The Band 's biggest songs, died in his sleep, his brother Ernie said.
" There are no words to express my feelings and the love I have for My Brother , " added Ronald Isley in a statement.
" Our Family will miss him. But I know he's in a better place. "
Although Rudolph largely sang harmonies with The Band , he took lead vocals on such tracks as I've Got to Get Myself Together and It's a Disco Night (Rock Don't Stop), which reached The Top 20 in the UK.
He also played a pivotal role in writing songs like Harvest For The World , Fight The Power and Shout - an enduring party anthem that became a major hit in Europe through Lulu's cover version.
First formed in the early 1950s, the Isley Brothers were among The Most influential bands in Pop Music , successfully shifting from gospel to Motown soul, and later gritty R& B and politically-motivated funk.
Hailing from Cincinnati, Ohio, the young group were initially a quartet comprised of Ronald, Rudolph, O'Kelly and Vernon Isley .
They briefly stopped performing in 1955 after Vernon, who sang lead vocals, was killed while riding his bicycle. He was just 13 years old.
Eventually persuaded to continue, The Others moved to New York and left Gospel Music behind.
On Tour in 1959, they covered Jackie Wilson 's Lonely Teardrops - Drawing out the closing call-and-response section and whipping The Crowd into a frenzy.
By The End of The Tour , " audiences were coming to The Theatre and waiting for The Song " Ronald later recalled.
They quickly began developing the outro into a song of their own and, when They Returned to New York , went straight to the studio to cut it, bringing in dozens of friends to capture the energy of their concerts.
That song was Shout , which became the Isley Brothers ' first million-selling record. It was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999, but at the Time Church groups objected to it.
" We turned a song with a gospel feel into an R& B hit, and the groups began writing [to] disc jockeys asking them to stop playing our record, " Ronald told the Wall Street Journal in 2015.
" They felt Shout should have been a church record. "
Despite the criticism, The Brothers knew they'd found a successful formula, and scored another hit in the early 60s with the equally-spirited Twist and Shout - later to become a staple of Beatles sets and the closing track of their debut album.
In 1964, The Brothers recruited a young Jimi Hendrix to their line-up, with his guitar work livening up hits like Testify before he left to go solo.
A year later, The Band signed to Motown Records, but found the label's Production Line approach stifling.
During their brief spell there, they only scored one hit, This Old Heart of Mine (Is Weak For You ), Written By the celebrated Holland-Dozier-Holland team with input from Sylvia Moy .
Leaving to form their own label, they welcomed Younger Brother Ernie to The Band , and his hard-edged guitar lines gave them a new lease of life.
In 1969, they scored a major hit with It's Your Thing and started covering rock anthems like Stephen Stills ' Love The One You're With and Bob Dylan 's Lay Lady Lay.
That triggered a dramatic rebirth, with a run of gold and platinum albums that fused soul melodies with spacey psychedelia and the hard-edged funk of Sly Stone and James Brown .
The transformation was made explicit on 1973's 3+3 album, where they retooled the jaunty 1964 single Who's That Lady with a searing fuzztone guitar line, taking The Song to Number Six in the US charts.
More hits followed - Summer Breeze , Harvest For The World , Fight The Power - All of which Rudolph co-wrote.
On record sleeves, Rudolph stood out for his flamboyant outfits - a combination of hats and furs accentuated by a bejewelled cane.
The second-eldest son of the Isley clan, he was nonetheless The Unspoken " overseer" of The Band , daughter Elizabeth Isley Barkley wrote in her memoir.
But, as with All families, relationships were often complicated.
" At times, it got pretty heated within The Family , and they'd be yelling at each other, " recalled engineer John Holbrook , who worked on several Isley Brothers albums in the late 70s.
" They were big, scary guys. Rudy was The Giant and kind of intimidating. "
After O'Kelly died of a Heart Attack in 1986, Rudolph decided to follow his long-held ambition to become a Christian minister, leaving The Band and passing the cane on to brother Ronald.
" Music and faith, they just run through Our Blood , " Rudolph said in the liner notes for a 1999 Isley Brothers box set.
" I may have stopped singing Pop Music , but I will always be an Isley Brother. "
He continued to sing, however, releasing a religious album called Shouting for Jesus in 1996, and was inducted to The Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame with his brothers in 1992.
This March, Rudolph sued Ronald, claiming his brother had tried to secure a trademark for the Isley Brothers ' under his own name, effectively excluding his sibling from the partnership.
The lawsuit claimed that the founding members were " at All times" a " common-law partnership".
His death leaves Ronald and Ernie as the only remaining brothers from The Band .
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com