The Wild Frontier
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The Wild Frontier
''The Wild Frontier'' is an album by Randy Stonehill, released in 1986 on Myrrh Records. Track listing All songs written by Randy Stonehill and Dave Perkins except where noted. Side one # "The Wild Frontier" (Stonehill) – 4:07 # "Here Come the Big Guitars" – 3:41 # "The Dying Breed" – 4:15 # "Words on the Wind" – 5:44 # "What's My Line" – 3:47 Side two # "What Do You Want from Life" (Stonehill) – 3:48 # " Get Together" (Chet Powers) – 3:50 # "Defender" – 3:01 # "Evangeline" (Stonehill) – 5:38 # "The Hope of Glory" (Stonehill) – 4:48 Personnel * Randy Stonehill – vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitars * Reese "Mr. B-3" Wynans – keyboards * Tom Howard – synthesizers, brass arrangements (10) * Rob Watson – synthesizers * Dave Perkins – synthesizers, acoustic guitar, electric guitars, bass guitar, percussion, backing vocals * Peter Robb – programming * Jerry Chamberlain – electric guitars, backing vocals * Jerry McPherson – electric ...
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Randy Stonehill
Randall Evan Stonehill (born March 12, 1952) is an American singer and songwriter from Stockton, California, best known as one of the pioneers of contemporary Christian music. His music is primarily folk rock in the style of James Taylor, but some of his albums have focused on new wave, pop, pop rock, roots rock, and children's music. Early life Randy Stonehill was born in Stockton, California.Source Citation: Birthdate: March 12, 1952; Birth County: San Joaquin. Source Information: Ancestry.com. California Birth Index, 1905–1995 the son of Leonard N. Stonehill and his wife, Pauline Correia and is the younger brother of Jeffrey Dean Stonehill. He graduated from Leigh High School, in San Jose, California, then moved to Los Angeles where he stayed with Christian rock singer, Larry Norman. Career Stonehill's first album, ''Born Twice'' was released in 1971, with financial help from Pat Boone. The album—one side a live performance, the other recorded in a studio—was re ...
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Get Together (The Youngbloods Song)
"Get Together", also known as "Let's Get Together" and "Everybody Get Together", is a song by American rock band the Youngbloods, originally included in their 1967 debut album ''The Youngbloods''. It was written in the mid-1960s by American singer-songwriter Chet Powers (stage name Dino Valenti), from psychedelic rock band Quicksilver Messenger Service. The single was The Youngbloods' only Top 40 on ''Billboard Hot 100''peaking at number five in 1969. Background The song is an appeal for peace and brotherhood, presenting the polarity of love versus fear, and the choice to be made between them. It is best remembered for the impassioned plea in the lines of its refrain ("Come on people now/Smile on your brother/Everybody get together/Try to love one another right now"), which is repeated several times in succession to bring the song to its conclusion. Original recording history The song was originally recorded as "Let's Get Together" by the Kingston Trio in a live performance in M ...
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Tonio K
Tonio K. (born Vladamir Steven M. Krikorian, July 4, 1950) is an American singer/songwriter who has released eight albums. His songs have been recorded by Al Green, Aaron Neville, Burt Bacharach, Bonnie Raitt, Chicago, Wynonna Judd and Vanessa Williams, among many others. His song, "16 Tons of Monkeys," co-written with guitarist Steve Schiff, was the featured tune in the 1992 Academy Award winning Short Film, '' Session Man''. He worked with Bacharach and hip-hop impresario Dr. Dre on Bacharach's ''At This Time,'' which won the Grammy for Best Pop Instrumental Recording in 2005. Recording and performing artist As a teenager, Krikorian, along with friends Alan Shapazian, Steve Olson, Nick van Maarth, and Duane Scott, formed a surf-funk/psychedelic-punk band called The Raik's Progress, which recorded a single for Liberty Records, released in 1966. Known for their Dadaist-inspired between-song routines, one reviewer described their performance while opening for Buffalo Springfie ...
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Chris Harris (musician)
Chris Harris is a Canadian musician from Vancouver, British Columbia. He is most noted for the 2020 album ''Philadelphia'',Stuart Berman"Shabason, Krgovich & Harris: ''Philadelphia''" ''Pitchfork'', November 11, 2020. a collaboration with Joseph Shabason and Nicholas Krgovich which was a longlisted nominee for the 2021 Polaris Music Prize. He was active in Vancouver's music scene in the 2000s and 2010s as a keyboardist in the post-rock combo The Secret Three, as a solo artist who released an EP in 2004 under the moniker Parks and Rec, as a multi-instrumentalist with Krgovich's P:ano, as a bass player in Destroyer, and as a singer and guitarist in the short-lived post-hardcore band Womankind. In 2021, Shabason, Krgovich and Harris again collaborated on the instrumental followup release ''Florence''. Harris contributed to the track "I'm Dancing" on Shabason and Krgovich's 2022 album ''At Scaramouche'', but was not credited as a principal performer.Kayla Higgins"Shabason & Krgovich A ...
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Gary Chapman (musician)
Gary Winther Chapman (born August 19, 1957) is an American contemporary Christian music singer-songwriter and former television talk show host. Early life and music career Born in Waurika, Oklahoma, Chapman grew up in De Leon, Texas, the son of an Assemblies of God pastor, the Rev. Terry W. Chapman, who ministered for 56 years before his death in 2009. Chapman performed in bands throughout high school and college. After going to Bible college at what is now Southwestern Assemblies of God University in Waxahachie, Texas, he moved to Nashville, Tennessee, and was hired as guitar player for The Rambos. In 1979, his song "Father's Eyes" was recorded as the title track to Amy Grant's Grammy-nominated second album '' My Father's Eyes''. In 1982, his song "Finally", recorded by T. G. Sheppard, reached No. 1 on the country music charts. He also received a Dove Award as Songwriter of the Year from the Gospel Music Association in 1981. During the rest of the 1980s and the early 1990s, ...
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Peter Case
Peter Case (born April 5, 1954) is an American singer-songwriter and guitarist. His career is wide-ranging, from rock n' roll and blues, to folk rock and solo acoustic performance. Biography Early career Case was born in Buffalo, New York and lived in nearby Hamburg, New York. He wrote his first song "Stay Away," in 1965, at the age of eleven. A veteran of several rock bands and the local bar scene as a teenager, Case dropped out of high school when he was fifteen (he would later earn a GED), and after several years of traveling arrived in 1973 in San Francisco, where he performed as a street musician. During this period a documentary about the local music scene, ''Nightshift,'' directed by Bert Deivert, captured the young Case on film. In 1976, he teamed up with Jack Lee and Paul Collins to form the early punk-era band The Nerves in San Francisco. The group's 1976 EP track, "Hanging on the Telephone", was later recorded by Blondie. The Nerves moved to Los Angeles on Jan ...
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Alex MacDougall
Alex MacDougall is an American record producer, and percussionist. MacDougall is best known for being a member of the Christian rock band Daniel Amos in the late-1970s in addition to his production and recording session credits. He was also a member of Selah, The Way, Salvation Air Force, The Richie Furay Band, The Randy Stonehill Band and The Larry Norman Band. Career MacDougall toured as part of the Richie Furay Band in 1976. Following his departure from Daniel Amos, MacDougall toured for a year with singer/guitarist/artist Bob Bennett. In addition to current advisory roles, MacDougall serves as an adjunct professor at Dallas Baptist University, as part of the Music Business Degree program. MacDougall has created and developed music concepts and projects for Time-Life, Guideposts, ''Reader's Digest'', Publishers Clearing House, Avon, EMI/Capitol Special Markets and Integrity Media, Inc. He also worked on the original 3 WOW WORSHIP projects (Blue, Orange, Green), as an A ...
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Keith Edwards (musician)
Keith Edwards may refer to: * Keith Edwards (footballer, born 1957) Keith Edwards (born 16 July 1957) is an English retired footballer. Edwards started his early career as a youth player with Leyton Orient in London, as his father was an Orient supporter. He became homesick and joined Sheffield United. A proli ..., English football player * Keith Edwards (footballer, born 1944), football player for Chester City * W. Keith Edwards, American computer scientist * Keith Edwards (cricketer) (born 1951), former English cricketer * Keith Edwards (rugby league) (born 1947), Australian rugby league footballer {{hndis, Edwards, Keith ...
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Mike Mead
Mike Mead is an American drummer, working from the mid-1980s to the mid 2000s with artists in the Christian rock and Contemporary Christian music (CCM) genres. Mead's first credit is on Rick Cua's 1985 CCM album ''You're My Road''. In addition to his ongoing work with Cua, Mead worked steadily with Phil Keaggy on his late 1980s and early 1990s albums '' Sunday's Child'' (1988), '' Find Me in These Fields'' (1990) and ''Crimson and Blue'' (1993); Steve Taylor on ''I Predict 1990'' (1987) and ''Squint'' (1993); as well as with Randy Stonehill, and Dave Perkins. Mead was also a member of Chagall Guevara on MCA records in the early 1990s, along with Taylor, Perkins, Lynn Nichols, and bassist Wade Jaynes. Other notable recordings were with White Heart, Whitecross and Kenny Marks. In addition to studio work, Mead also toured the US and Europe with Chagall, White Heart and Marks. Mead was also a member of the Compassion International All-Star band with Keaggy, Cua, Stonehill, Margaret ...
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Rick Cua
Rick Cua (born December 3, 1948) is an American Christian rock singer, songwriter, bassist, author and ordained minister. He is a former member of the Southern rock band, Outlaws, whom he joined in 1980, but left in 1983 to pursue a full-time career in contemporary Christian music, the year after, wherein he gained popularity throughout most of the 1980s as a leather-jacket-wearing rocker with an arena rock sound featuring big, shout-along choruses.Alfonso, Barry. ''The Billboard Guide to Contemporary Christian Music''. New York: Billboard, 2002. p. 148-49. Background After recording with Reunion and Sparrow records, he signed to Reunion in 1988, where his works began to take on a softer, more radio-friendly tone that included "sentimental ballads and pop-rock anthems in the style of Michael Bolton." Cua left Reunion in 1992 after just over a decade of radio airplay including six No. 1 Christian radio songs, creating his own label, UCA Records, on which he recorded three stud ...
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Jerry Chamberlain
Jerry Chamberlain is an American singer, songwriter, guitarist, and producer, best known for his work with the rock bands Daniel Amos and the Swirling Eddies (credited as "Spot"). In late 1974, Chamberlain was asked to join Jubal's Last Band, a band that consisted of Terry Scott Taylor, Steve Baxter and bassist Kenny Paxton. Marty Dieckmeyer was soon brought in as a replacement for the departing Paxton. Sometime in the middle of 1975, Jubal's Last Band or Jubal (as a shortened form of the name was briefly used) auditioned for Maranatha! Music and Calvary Chapel (without Baxter, who couldn't get off work) in hopes of signing a recording and performance contract. At a Maranatha Music meeting, another band led by Darrell Mansfield, was also using the name, Jubal. The two bands decided to change their names to avoid confusion. Mansfield renamed his band ''Gentle Faith'', and Jubal's Last Band/Jubal became Daniel Amos. Daniel Amos succeeded in landing a recording and performance c ...
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Rob Watson (musician)
Robert D. Watson is a keyboardist, record producer and composer. He is best known for his work with the rock bands Daniel Amos and The Swirling Eddies The Swirling Eddies are an American rock band that began as an anonymous spinoff from the band Daniel Amos, along with new drummer David Raven. Career For each Swirling Eddies release, band members adopted pseudonyms for the liner notes; "Cama ... (credited as Arthur Fhardy). Watson has many projects to his credit, including his album ''Great Hymns of the Faith'', released in 1996. References Living people American keyboardists American record producers American audio engineers 20th-century American composers 21st-century American composers American male composers The Swirling Eddies members Daniel Amos members 20th-century American male musicians 21st-century American male musicians Year of birth missing (living people) {{US-composer-20thC-stub ...
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