Rod Stewart in his time with the group Faces. On the sound system it has the name "Small Faces", which was the predecessor group
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elton john, rod stewart, marc bolan
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Rod Stewart & Elton John, 1973
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Rod Stewart, Faces, 1972.
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March 1976, 1976, Beverly Hills, USA -
During 'A Night At The Opera Tour'
🔸Following the first of three SRO appearances by Queen at Santa Monica Civic Audi- torium, Elektra/ Asylum Records feted the group at The Mandarin Restaurant in Beverly
Hills, where label executives presented the band with gold record awards for their most recent Elektra album, "A Night at the Opera."
Seen at the presentation are, from left: (standing) Steve Wax, executive vice president, Elektra/ Asylum Records; Spence
Berland, vice president, Record World; Connie Pappas, vice president, John Reid Enter- prises; Joe Smith, chairman, Elektra/Asylum Records; Mel Posner, president, Elektra/
Asylum Records; and Jerry Sharell, vice president, international division, adverstising and artist relations.
Seated are the members of the Queen (from left): Brian May, Freddie Mercury, John Deacon and Roger Taylor
March 1976, Beverly Hills, USA - Freddie Mercury and Rod Stewart at Mandarin Restaurant where Queen were awarded the Golden Disc for 'A Night At The Opera'
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Jeff Beck Group - Jeff Beck & Rod Stewart
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I had a revelation: "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" is basically "Maggie May," but gay.
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La Lamborghini Miura P400S de Rod Stewart. - source Cars & Motorbikes Stars of the Golden era.
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After watching “It’s a Good Life” on The Twilight Zone, you start to realize that this whole “there’s no such thing as objective good or objective bad, morality is relative” is just self-protective. We’re just afraid of real evil. We’re just afraid of real good. Because we can’t control it. Because we didn’t decide on it.
This episode of a TV show about a boy who can and does kill you if you think anything he does is “evil” or anything he hates is “good” points out that we’d rather change the definition of good and evil if it makes us feel safe…than risk ourselves by confronting Real Evil, or protecting Real Good.
The townspeople would rather say murdering dogs and children is Good, and life without food or music is Good, than stand up to the terrifying Real Evil.
Go watch that episode, where they say “It’s a Good Life” as their crops freeze and their music and art disappears—then come tell me that “everyone’s definition of good and evil is what’s right for them.”
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