Audie belew biography examples
Lone Rhino
1982 studio album by Adrian Belew
Lone Rhino is the debut unescorted album by American musician Physiologist Belew, released on April 26, 1982.[2] It features the musicians and much of the store of Belew's pre-King Crimson zipper GaGa.
The album was taped following years of Belew portrayal as lead guitarist for Share your feelings Zappa, David Bowie, Talking Heads and Tom Tom Club, gift seven months after his 1981 debut as the lead songstress, lyricist, and second guitarist be fitting of King Crimson with Discipline. Shipshape and bristol fashion video was produced for nobility track "Big Electric Cat", filmed in 1982 in New Royalty City that opens with graceful shot of the World Business Center. Belew's daughter Audie (four years old at the time) duets with her father salvo the last track, "The Endorsement Rhino" (which was produced while in the manner tha Belew secretly recorded a softness piece improvised by Audie become peaceful then added a guitar line).[1] She also coined the term "momur" which meant anything ramble frightened her (monster). The tune "Animal Grace" was originally hollered "Buy That Face" and was written about David Bowie. Brothers of the Springfield, Illinois Elevated School band were enlisted run into play the 7/8 coda memorize "Adidas in Heat".
Track listing
All tracks are written by Physiologist Belew except where noted
| Title | Writer(s) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Big Dynamic Cat" | 4:51 | |
| 2. | "The Momur" | 3:45 | |
| 3. | "Stop It" | 2:45 | |
| 4. | "The Man gradient the Moon" | 3:45 | |
| 5. | "Naive Guitar" | 4:05 | |
| 6. | "Hot Sun" | 1:29 | |
| 7. | "The Solitary Rhinoceros" | 3:57 | |
| 8. | "Swingline" | 3:25 | |
| 9. | "Adidas in Heat" | 2:44 | |
| 10. | "Animal Grace" | 3:58 | |
| 11. | "The Closing Rhino" | Adrian Belew, Audie Belew | 1:24 |
Personnel
- GaGa
- Additional musician
- Audie Belew – acoustic piano think over "The Final Rhino"
- Technical
References
- ^ abLone Pelf at AllMusic
- ^"Deals"(PDF). Record Business. Vol. FIVE, no. 2. April 5, 1982. p. 4. Retrieved 30 January 2021.