What does eddie money sing




















I am from a small town in ohio called Lima. I am making a project for english where i have to make many many different informational forms to present about your musical career. Back in the 70's my Uncle Danny Guvaro was a bass guitar player for Eddie.

I have pictures when I was a kid, playing in my Uncle and Aunts back yard in San Leandro, and Eddie teaching me to shooting bow and arrows at the fence in thier back yard. My Aunt Jacinta still has many pictures of Eddie and I but sad to say Danny passed away many years ago.

Hope Eddie keeps up the good music and thanks for some kool memories for a young kid that lost his own father at a very young age. Thanks again. Hey Eddie!! I don't know if you remember from Island Trees.

Probably not it's been a loooong time. You may remember the airport in - you were going to the 20 year reunion. I was there with my husband just got married and my 2 nieces. They recgonized you and I said that I knew you from high school so I came over and you said you did remember me and my nieces were sooooo excited to meet you. You asked if I was going back for the reunion - just got married and we were going on our honeymoon so I couldn't make it. You told me you would check on my nieces during the flight.

When they arrived home, Long Island, they called and said you really did check on them and they felt sooooo special. Thank you for that!! I'm so happy for you - according to your website you are VERY busy and doing well. I'll check your tour dates for something close to me Culver City, CA and my family and I will come see you. Love your music!! Wish you and your family the very best!

Pam fmly Palma Craddock. I think my father would have wanted you to know that he passed away on April 7, We are still making the service arrangements. My father has a picture of Rocky Mauzanio the fighter and my grandfather, he wanted you to have a copy.

I would like to get the picture to you. If you would please let me know how I can do so I will. You can e-mail me at Stillnothegirl aol. I will also let you know when and where his services will be if you'd like. Thankyou for taking the time to read this.

I will be looking forward to hearing from you. With respect, John. You are the best. Please come back and visit us again SOON! CB FAN. The Concert in Council Bluffs was fantastic.

We are all still talking about it. Just went out to Omahanightlife. You are a real stand up guy for being there for us even after the concert and we all enjoyed it tremendously! I've been a big fan since "Two Tickets" came out way back when. My son who is 17 has liked your music since he was about 4. I'd like to thank you for all the great music and memories. Happy Birthday Eddie See you then.

Love,love,love your approach to music and the way it's delivered. Your birthday is March 21, mine is March When you come to Detroit, and if you're available, I'll fix your whole crew and family my specialty - Tortilla Soup. If you have small children traveling with your troupe, my granddaughter, Erica will take them under her wing. Saw Eddie in Siesta key florida We where right on the stage Not only is he awsum he is funny as hell to.. We saw your show last night at Tangiers' Nite Club, and everyone was on their feet.

You pack the house when ever you're in town. Saw the band at Rama in Ontario the end of May and it was fantastic. I would definately attend their concert again, but unfortunately, they don't come to Canada very often. Eddie - I thought you said you went Gold in Canada first - so bring back your music and band to us.

Next time, I want back stage passes to meet you all Saw eddie and the band at Casino Rama in Ontario Canada just recently. I would definately go see them all again. It was a great show - did not disappoint at all. I want back stage passes next time to meet ALL the band, especially Lee. I am pretty sure you said you went gold in canada first. Performed in his hometown area on Long Island.

He wrote the book and alot of new songs. The show is kinda of a cross between" Jersey Boys" and Movin Out. He was in the show narrating his own story. It was friggin awesome. He and the director discoverd this 15 year old high school freshman from right near his hometown to play "Young Eddie" and could this kid rock.

He had Eddie's moves down and when this kid Jess forget last name sang "Shakin" it was just like back when Eddie first did it on Don Kirshner's Rock Concert. If this show comes near you, See it, it was friggin unbelievable. Does anyone know?? That's really why we got together in the first place. I loved his voice, he loved mine. He had a crazy, great sense of humor, and was a real character, with the kind of positive vibe that we don't see today, but we sure could use more of.

Meanwhile, "Two Tickets to Paradise" became a favorite on classic rock radio stations and was heard everywhere from "The Simpsons" to "The Office. For years, he lived too much like a rock star. In , he sustained nerve damage in his legs after overdosing on alcohol and barbiturates, a near-tragedy he wrote about on his hit album "No Control.

Money did manage the rare rock achievement of a long-term marriage, more than 30 years to Laurie Harris, who would say that at first she confused him with John Mellencamp. A born troublemaker, he was thrown out of one high school for forging his report card. He later moved to Berkeley, California, changed his name to "Money" and had enough success in the Bay Area clubs, even performing for a time with Janis Joplin's former backing group, to attract the attention of famed rock promoter Bill Graham.

Jimmy Lyon's surging guitar solo sends his frontman into a leering whisper that then slowly builds into this eruptive plea for the kind of fame Money wouldn't ultimately achieve until he hooked up with Ronnie Spector in the late-'80s for a throwaway pop song.

A low-charting single from one of the final sessions with Lyon, "Get a Move On" which actually features replacement John Nelson on guitar finds Money dabbling with a sun-streaked brand of power pop. It made for a dollop of compulsively enjoyable sing-along fun, but also one of the few highlights on perhaps the weakest early album by a still-experimenting Money.

Drive-by fans will remember this album for its early-'60s throwback hit "Take Me Home Tonight," but the presence of the iconic Spector ensures that it's hardly representative. A better example of Money's lifetime-in-the-making recipe for hitmaking success on Can't Hold Back itself a perfect mix of working-stiff sentiment and AOR crunch can be found here as Money rides a propulsive, sax-driven groove toward a hard-won realization about high school.

Money's two-times platinum debut is quite rightly forever associated with its breakout hits "Two Tickets to Paradise" and "Baby Hold On. This is as heartbreakingly bereft, as brutally honest, as anything he'd ever put to tape. By its end, Money has shown himself to be much more than the son of cop who simply liked to rock a little. At first, "Think I'm in Love" sounds like what it no doubt is: An early-'80s pop confection that would become this album's highest-charting single at No.

That is, until drummer Gary Mallaber hits this little stutter-step fill, and suddenly the rest of Money's whip-sharp band comes into focus. From Ralph Carter's coiled bass to Marty Walsh's locomotive guitar, "Think I'm in Love" is ultimately revealed to have a surprising complexity, as well.

The final ballad on our list is perhaps Money's best interpretive moment, bolstered by a lean for its time, at least music bed courtesy of co-producers Richie Zito and David Kershenbaum. Zito also adds this consistently dark undertow on guitar, particularly after Money quiets the band to more forcefully handle Stan Meissner's lyric. The result is an emotional centerpoint on Money's biggest '80s-era album.



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