The Dark Side of the Wall
There are several artists with the name Stallion: (1) A UK progressive rock band from the early 70s (2) A NZ rock/metal band formed in 2010 (3) A Swedish AOR band (4) A German heavy/speed metal band (5) An alias of german techno producer Henning Baer. (6) A 70s rock band from Colorado. 1. United Kingdom Of the many obscure, trench-coated progressive rock groups that germinated in the garages, sheds and studios of England in the early '70s, Stallion are now recognised as one of the great lost bands of the first progressive era. Hailed critically - by those lucky enough to see them perform - Stallion regularly appeared on the same bill as many of their more well known contemporaries, including, Curved Air , Stackridge, Rare Bird, Stray, Edgar Broughton Band and Traffic. As well as appearing as support act for T. Rex and Motörhead and becoming regulars on the London club circuit, Stallion became London's much loved Saturday night favourites, with their exciting and dynamic live act earning them a record breaking headlining residency at the legendary Marquee Club in Soho's Wardour Street. Stallion were always the band who liked to break the rules and challenge the norm. Reacting to what they saw as the bland state of local music, drummer Steve Demetri, guitarist Tony Bridger and singer Tich Turner formed Stallion in 1972, aiming from the outset to put original compositions at the top of their agenda, performed with a professional and theatrical stage show that was very much in keeping with the progressive musical times. Steve had been influenced by early Genesis, King Crimson, Billy Cobham and Frank Zappa, whilst Tony had developed a guitar style influenced by his love of contemporary rock guitarists, including Rory Gallagher and Jimi Hendrix. Tich, meanwhile, had come from a background of American R&B, listening to everything from Marvin Gaye to Little Feat. This first line-up was completed by Steve Kinch on bass, (who went on to tour with Hazel O'Connor before joining Manfred Mann's Earth Band). Steve was later replaced on bass by Roger Carey in 1974. Despite winning the 1976 Melody Maker magazine competition and playing on the main stage at Reading Festival later that year (CD Rom footage of which is available on their recently released retrospective CD The Hard Life) and having successfully merged progressive rock moves with punk attitude, major label success eluded Stallion and they broke up in the late '70s a well kept secret. Their new remastered CD The Hard Life contains their rare 1975 single and songs from 'the album that never was', together with an extensive history of the band and previously unseen photographs. https://root.theworkpc.com/music/preview?img=http://www.myspace.com/stallionuk. 2. New Zealand Stallion (NZ) formed as a covers band in Dunedin in 2010. Comprised of Tim Kent (vocals, guitar), Glen Pearce (bass), Adon Moskal (synths, guitar), and Isaac Proctor (drums), Stallion began by playing mostly 70s and 80s rock staples at weddings and on the local pub circuit. At the end of 2010 they recorded a demo of an original track 'Feels Good', and are currently working as an originals/covers band in Dunedin, New Zealand and are looking to release more material in 2011. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
There are several artists with the name Stallion: (1) A UK progressive rock band from the early 70s (2) A NZ rock/metal band formed in 2010 (3) A Swedish AOR band (4) A German heavy/speed metal band (5) An alias of german techno producer Henning Baer. (6) A 70s rock band from Colorado. 1. United Kingdom Of the many obscure, trench-coated progressive rock groups that germinated in the garages, sheds and studios of England in the early '70s, Stallion are now recognised as one of the great lost bands of the first progressive era. Hailed critically - by those lucky enough to see them perform - Stallion regularly appeared on the same bill as many of their more well known contemporaries, including, Curved Air , Stackridge, Rare Bird, Stray, Edgar Broughton Band and Traffic. As well as appearing as support act for T. Rex and Motörhead and becoming regulars on the London club circuit, Stallion became London's much loved Saturday night favourites, with their exciting and dynamic live act earning them a record breaking headlining residency at the legendary Marquee Club in Soho's Wardour Street. Stallion were always the band who liked to break the rules and challenge the norm. Reacting to what they saw as the bland state of local music, drummer Steve Demetri, guitarist Tony Bridger and singer Tich Turner formed Stallion in 1972, aiming from the outset to put original compositions at the top of their agenda, performed with a professional and theatrical stage show that was very much in keeping with the progressive musical times. Steve had been influenced by early Genesis, King Crimson, Billy Cobham and Frank Zappa, whilst Tony had developed a guitar style influenced by his love of contemporary rock guitarists, including Rory Gallagher and Jimi Hendrix. Tich, meanwhile, had come from a background of American R&B, listening to everything from Marvin Gaye to Little Feat. This first line-up was completed by Steve Kinch on bass, (who went on to tour with Hazel O'Connor before joining Manfred Mann's Earth Band). Steve was later replaced on bass by Roger Carey in 1974. Despite winning the 1976 Melody Maker magazine competition and playing on the main stage at Reading Festival later that year (CD Rom footage of which is available on their recently released retrospective CD The Hard Life) and having successfully merged progressive rock moves with punk attitude, major label success eluded Stallion and they broke up in the late '70s a well kept secret. Their new remastered CD The Hard Life contains their rare 1975 single and songs from 'the album that never was', together with an extensive history of the band and previously unseen photographs. https://root.theworkpc.com/music/preview?img=http://www.myspace.com/stallionuk. 2. New Zealand Stallion (NZ) formed as a covers band in Dunedin in 2010. Comprised of Tim Kent (vocals, guitar), Glen Pearce (bass), Adon Moskal (synths, guitar), and Isaac Proctor (drums), Stallion began by playing mostly 70s and 80s rock staples at weddings and on the local pub circuit. At the end of 2010 they recorded a demo of an original track 'Feels Good', and are currently working as an originals/covers band in Dunedin, New Zealand and are looking to release more material in 2011. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Kill the Beast
Dynamiter
Down And Out
Canadian Steele
Rise and Ride
Time to Reload
Meltdown
Waking the Demons
Wild Stallions
All In
Merchants of Fear
No Mercy
Streets of Sin
The Right One
Watch Out
Hold The Line
Die with Me
Brain Dead
Stigmatized
Underground Society
Waiting For A Sign
Bill to Pay
Wooden Horse
From The Dead
The Devil Never Sleeps
Step Aside
Awaken The Night
Blackbox
Killing time
Lord Of The Trenches
Give It To Me
Shadow run
Heavy Metal Rock´n Roll
Let My Fingers Do the Talking
If Life Were Death
Wild Stallions
Rise and Ride
In the Flesh?
Canadian Steele
Stigmatized
Santa (Can You Hear Me)
The Right One
Arsony in the UK
The Hard Life
Fresh Out of Borstal
Watch Out
Another Brick in the Wall Pt. 2
Bill to Pay
The Devil Never Sleeps
No Presents For Christmas
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