(Sanctuary) ...
T. Rex strode confidently into the Teenage Sensation void that existed between the break-up of The Beatles and the start of David Bowie’s early-70s domination of Top of the Pops. At the fag-end of the ...
English rock ‘n’ roll movies from the ’70s are one of life’s unsung pleasures. Instead of sticking to basic boring concert footage, the drug-addled pranksters behind them tended to intercut surreal ...
It’s spring 1972 and Marc Bolan, the rest of T.Rex and producer Tony Visconti – who tells this story – are in a limo travelling from Orly airport to the 18th-century Château d’Hérouville (recently ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. In 1972, Marc Bolan and T.Rex were selling 100,000 records a day and playing sold-out gigs on both sides of the Atlantic. Indeed, when ...
Ringo Starr and Marc Bolan became close friends and drinking buddies in the early Seventies, and on Saturday, Starr inducted the late T. Rex frontman and his band into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ...
The music of T. Rex has often been used in films and television to evoke the stylish swagger and debauched effulgence of the British glam rock scene that frontman Marc Bolan led in the early ’70s. But ...
It’s hard to imagine how voluminous late producer Hal Willner’s contact list must have been. Who else could employ musicians that range from top-tier names like U2, Elton John, Todd Rundgren, Kesha, ...
T. Rex were an English rock band, formed in 1967 by singer, songwriter, poet and guitarist Marc Bolan (born Mark Feld in Hackney, London on September 30, 1947). They were initially called ...
1972 was Marc Bolan’s year – and T.Rex - The Slider, the album that captures the ‘First Man of Glam Rock’ at his creative and commercial peak, has now been lovingly remastered for the first time by ...
Marc Bolan’s career had been in a slump before the 12th T. Rex album Dandy in the Underworld arrived on March 11, 1977 – or at least, that’s how the media presented it. Bolan himself had a different ...
Twenty-eight years after the untimely death of T. Rex frontman Marc Bolan, this 1972 film gets the re-release it deserves. At a near-overwhelming 325 minutes, the comprehensive two-disc set offers a ...
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