Diamond Head

Rate It! Avg: 5.0 (9 ratings)
Diamond Head album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 47:09

eMusic Features

0

Icon: Bryan Ferry & Roxy Music

By Barry Walters, eMusic Contributor

It was early 1976. Roxy Music was coming to town, and if I couldn't see them, I would surely die. My mother - who almost cut my miserable life short by forbidding me to see David Bowie back in '74 - thought she'd outfox me by allowing me to see these glam rock gods only if I had an adult chaperone. Somehow, I persuaded my Donovan-loving freshman high school Social Studies teacher to accompany me… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Phil Manzanera’s first post-Roxy foray into solo albums is a terrific all-star affair that still holds up enormously well. Calling on favors from Roxy members present and past, and those from the Cambridge/British art rock scene, Manzanera assembled a supergroup for every song. Robert Wyatt sings Spanish gibberish on the opener “Frontera,” a rewrite of his own “Team Spirit.” Brian Eno teams up for the sunny “Big Day” and the nonsensical “Miss Shapiro,” both of which would not have been out of place on his own early solo albums. John Wetton (of several groups including Family and Asia) sings a duet with Doreen Chanter (of the Chanter Sisters and the Joe Cocker Band), and Bill MacCormick of Matching Mole and Quiet Sun sings his own “Alma,” the album’s closing ballad. Fans of any of the singers above, not to mention Manzanera, whose party this is, won’t be disappointed. A majority of these tracks went on to form the set list for 801 Live. – Ted Mills

more »