"Somebody that i used to know" 404 download digital e cd single n.º título duração 1. #Kings of leon use somebody mp3 download#.That’s why he was so upset when somebody found an old trash and brought it up under a spotlight after 34 years. And from this point on they just never clicked, and even though they they saw his talent they didn’t like him as a person.Īlthough for some reason everyone, who passed through that band, eventually found himself magically converted into a new-born fan of the genre and is looking back at their experience with fond memories, and Tony Carey is no exception. Because he wasn’t a fan, he came off a bit standoffish and arrogant – after all he just wanted to use them for his ulterior motives and leave them behind when he was through with them – but both Ritchie and Cozy picked up on that vibe from the getgo and that rubbed them the wrong way, of course. He didn’t like heavy rock but decided to go ahead and do that anyway for the sake of his career. After all he gladly joined Over The Rainbow tribute project.īut back in a day he was a talented young aspiring musician looking to get his break, which he found with Ritchie Blackmore’s Rainbow. Perhaps because after 34 years of retrospecting he probably sees the past in a different light, understands better what happened and why and what Ritchie is/was really about, and retaining mostly the good memories of that time and how it propelled forward and upward his dream career, and to whom he owns his success.
Mike Campbell of Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, 1999ĭickey Betts of the Allman Brothers, 1992 Johnette Napolitano of Concrete Blonde, 1990 Patterson Hood of the Drive-By Truckers, 2003 Tom Johnston of the Doobie Brothers, 1991 Hey, sometimes it pays to knock on wood, right Tony? I know you’re not my Facebook Friend anymore, but I’d like to part on better terms, so here’s another audio excerpt from that 32-year-old interview that you might appreciate more than the last one. I’m a big fan of your work with Rainbow, and your Some Tough City solo LP made my list of the Top 10 albums of 1984. Carey, the goal of banging out that blog yesterday was not to piss you off. Or it could just be that I’ve always been fascinated by how such a supremely gifted guitarist as Ritchie Blackmore, one of my all-time faves, could be viewed by so many fellow musicians and ex-bandmates as such a dick.Īt any rate, Mr. Or maybe it’s just because I’m bored during my current staycation and felt like digitizing some of the more intriguing quotes I’ve gathered on cassette over the last 30-plus years of interviewing rockers. Or maybe it’s because the Rainbow album that first brought you fame, Rising, just celebrated its 40th anniversary, and every classic-rock blogger in the world has been trumpeting that fact since Tuesday. I don’t know. Maybe because I’m a longtime music writer who’s deeply interested in the history of the awesome rock bands I grew up loving in the ’70s–including the untold stories behind them. “Why in the world would you take a 32-year-old interview and make a new blog out of it?,” he asked, before adding the fun part: “F*** you, ass****.” Turns out the singer, songwriter, and keyboard great was none too impressed with the blog I posted yesterday, which included audio from 1984 of him denouncing his previous band, Rainbow, and in particular guitarist Ritchie Blackmore. I woke up to an angry Facebook message from rocker Tony Carey this morning.