Twisted (Del Amitri album)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Twisted_(Del_Amitri_album) an entity of type: Thing

Twisted is the fourth studio album by Del Amitri, released on 28 February 1995. It reached number three in the UK Albums Chart and was listed by Q Magazine as one of the top 10 best albums of 1995. It was the last album to feature guitarist David Cummings, who left to begin a successful career in TV scriptwriting, and the only to feature drummer Chris Sharrock, who agreed to play on Twisted but declined to join the band as a permanent member. With a firmer emphasis on electric guitars than the band's last outing, 1992's Change Everything, the album represented a moderate change of direction for Del Amitri, whilst retaining their trademark melodic sensibilities. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Twisted (Del Amitri album)
rdf:langString Twisted
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xsd:date 2021-01-23
rdf:langString Justin Currie, except as noted
rdf:langString Del Amitri
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xsd:integer 1995
rdf:langString Del Amitri - Twisted Album Cover.jpg
rdf:langString Clay
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rdf:langString Al Clay
rdf:langString Don Smith
rdf:langString none credited
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rdf:langString The Groovey Tubes
rdf:langString Stewart Cruickshank
rdf:langString engineered by Kenny Patterson
rdf:langString engineered by Patterson
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xsd:integer 1992
rdf:langString Al Clay
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xsd:date 1995-02-28
xsd:integer 1995
rdf:langString Encyclopedia of Popular Music
rdf:langString Q
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rdf:langString Palladium
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rdf:langString The Chapel
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rdf:langString Here and Now
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rdf:langString Crashing Down
rdf:langString A Better Man
rdf:langString Twisted
rdf:langString In the Meantime
rdf:langString Never Enough
rdf:langString The Last Love Song
rdf:langString Stone Cold Sober
rdf:langString Hatful of Rain
rdf:langString The Ones That You Love Lead You Nowhere
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rdf:langString Twisted is the fourth studio album by Del Amitri, released on 28 February 1995. It reached number three in the UK Albums Chart and was listed by Q Magazine as one of the top 10 best albums of 1995. It was the last album to feature guitarist David Cummings, who left to begin a successful career in TV scriptwriting, and the only to feature drummer Chris Sharrock, who agreed to play on Twisted but declined to join the band as a permanent member. With a firmer emphasis on electric guitars than the band's last outing, 1992's Change Everything, the album represented a moderate change of direction for Del Amitri, whilst retaining their trademark melodic sensibilities. The album included Del Amitri's most successful single, "Roll to Me", which reached the top ten in the US Hot 100. The band are known not to consider the song one of their best, however, and have often seemed irked by the fact that what they see as a throwaway pop song gave them their biggest hit. Also included was "Tell Her This", one of the group's most well-known songs.
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