IT WAS SO EASY
LIVING DAY BY DAY
OUT OF TOUCH
WITH THE RHYTHM AND BLUES
60's-70's (Classic Rock) / Late 70's -80's (Metal/Hard Rock)/ 50's -60's (Oldies)
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Ian Hunter : Ian Hunter (30th Anniversary Reissue)

Ian Hunter Patterson
(Born June, 3rd 1939)
is an English singer,
songwriter and musician.
He is best known
as the lead vocalist
of the rock band
Mott the Hoople
from its inception in 1969
to its dissolution in 1974,
and at the time of its 2009,
2013,
and
2019 reunions.
Hunter was a musician
and songwriter
before joining
Mott the Hoople,
and continued in this vein
after he left the band.
He embarked on a
solo career
despite ill health
and disillusionment with
commercial success,
and often worked in
collaboration with
Mick Ronson,
David Bowie's
sideman and arranger from
The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust
and the Spiders from Mars period.
Mott the Hoople
achieved some commercial success,
and attracted a small
but devoted fan base.
As a solo artist,
Hunter charted with lesser-known
but more wide-ranging works
outside the rock mainstream.
His best-known solo songs are
"Once Bitten, Twice Shy",
later covered by
Great White,
and
"England Rocks",
which was modified to
"Cleveland Rocks"
and then covered by
the Presidents of the United States of America,
and became one of the
theme songs
used for the American
TV series
The Drew Carey Show.
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
The Rolling Stones : Charlie Is My Darling: Soundtrack/Ireland 1965 ...and More
Charles Robert Watts
(June 2nd 1941 – August, 24th 2021)
was an
English musician
who was
the drummer
of
from 1963
until his death in 2021.
Monday, June 1, 2026
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Peter, Paul, and Mary : (Ten) Years Together -The Best Of Peter, Paul and Mary
Peter Yarrow
(May 31, 1938 – January 7, 2025)
was an American singer
and songwriter
who found fame
as a member
of the 1960s
folk trio
Peter, Paul and Mary
along with
Paul Stookey
and
Mary Travers.
Born in Manhattan
in 1938,
he attended
New York's
High School of
Music and Art
as a teenager
and was then accepted at
Cornell University.
During his last year
at Cornell in 1959,
he began his
music career
as a student
guitar instructor there,
and after graduating,
met the manager
and impresario
Albert Grossman.
Grossman's idea of a
musical trio
eventually led to
Yarrow forming
a folk band with
Stookey and Travers.
Peter, Paul and Mary's
early hits included
"Lemon Tree"
and
"If I Had a Hammer",
which was followed by
their self-titled debut
studio album
in 1962.
Yarrow co-wrote
(with Lenny Lipton)
one of the group's
best known hits,
"Puff, the Magic Dragon"
(1963).
He was also involved
in the civil rights movement,
performing for the
March on Washington
and
Selma to Montgomery
marches.
Illness and death
Yarrow died from
bladder cancer
at his Upper West Side
apartment,
on
January 7, 2025,
after a month in
hospice care.
He was 86,
and was diagnosed
with the illness
four years prior.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
Led Zeppelin : How The West Was Won
HOW SOFT YOUR FIELDS SO GREEN
CAN WHISPER TALES OF GORE
OF HOW WE CALMED
THE TIDES OF WAR
WE ARE YOUR OVERLORDS











