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Mick Strode, acclaimed songwriter, acoustic and electric guitarist - former member of Forever More and Robert Plant's Band of Joy - offers here his recent solo albums
- Behind The Eyes
Behind The Eyes Completed at the end of 2015, this is...
- Biography
Mick Strode started playing acoustic guitar in folk / blues...
- Reviews
All of Mick’s contemporary songs are well crafted with...
- Links
Comments and suggestions regarding this website can be made...
- Forever More
Forever More: Introduction 1969 saw the birth of Forever...
- Behind The Eyes
Mick Strode started playing acoustic guitar in folk / blues clubs where he met and played with Robert Plant and Perry Foster . Subsequently he joined Robert Plant and The Band of Joy on electric guitar. After leaving Art College, Mick moved to London.
For a 1968 tour of Scotland, Plant and Bonham used bassist John Hill (ex–Uncle Joseph) and guitarist Mick Strode to fill in a temporary line-up. 1977–1983. In 1977 Gammond and Paul Lockey revived Band of Joy, rounding out the line-up with John Pasternak, Peter Robinson, and keyboardist Michael Chetwood.
Plant and Bonham recruited bassist John Hill and guitarist Mick Strode to join a temporary line-up for a 1968 tour. Kevyn Gammond and Paul Lockey revived Band of Joy in 1977, adding John Pasternak (bass), Michael Chetwood (keyboards) and Peter Robinson (drums) to the lineup.
Forever More was a late 1960s and early 1970s progressive rock [citation needed] band. Forever More were signed to RCA New York and produced two LPs on that label. Both LPs were recorded at Olympic Studios in London, at the end of 1969/early 1970. Forever More's first LP, " Yours " was released in 1970. Forever More's second LP, " Words on ...
Mar 27, 2014 · Forever More was a four piece consisting of Alan Gorrie (vocals, bass, piano), Onnie McIntyre, also known as Onnie Mair (guitar, bass, vocals), Stuart Francis (drum, vocals), Mick Travis (guitar, vocals). Alan Gorrie is the main lead vocalist, and Mick Travis sings lead on some of his own compositions, some of which are stylistically different.