David Johansen (album)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/David_Johansen_(album) an entity of type: Thing

David Johansen is a 1978 album by the rock musician David Johansen and his first solo album following his tenure as lead singer of the New York Dolls. The album was released on Blue Sky Records, a sub-label of Columbia Records that was associated with Johnny and Edgar Winter. David Johansen also features fellow New York Doll guitarist Sylvain Sylvain, who was a member of the David Johansen Band at that time. Sylvain co-wrote four of the songs with Johansen. The single from the album was Johansen and Sylvain's "Funky But Chic", backed with "The Rope (The Let Go Song)", which has been included as a bonus track on the CD. David Johansen was voted the tenth best record of 1978 in the Pazz & Jop, an annual poll of American critics published by The Village Voice. rdf:langString
rdf:langString David Johansen (album)
rdf:langString David Johansen
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rdf:langString David Johansen-David Johansen .jpg
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rdf:langString hard rock
rdf:langString punk rock
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xsd:integer 1979
rdf:langString Richard Robinson, David Johansen
rdf:langString February 1978
rdf:langString May 1978
rdf:langString Christgau's Record Guide
rdf:langString The Rolling Stone Album Guide
rdf:langString A−
rdf:langString The Record Plant, New York
rdf:langString David Johansen is a 1978 album by the rock musician David Johansen and his first solo album following his tenure as lead singer of the New York Dolls. The album was released on Blue Sky Records, a sub-label of Columbia Records that was associated with Johnny and Edgar Winter. David Johansen also features fellow New York Doll guitarist Sylvain Sylvain, who was a member of the David Johansen Band at that time. Sylvain co-wrote four of the songs with Johansen. The single from the album was Johansen and Sylvain's "Funky But Chic", backed with "The Rope (The Let Go Song)", which has been included as a bonus track on the CD. David Johansen was voted the tenth best record of 1978 in the Pazz & Jop, an annual poll of American critics published by The Village Voice.
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