Roxy Music c1973, recording sessions for the album 'For Your Pleasure'
Top (L-to-R): John Porter (temp bassist), Bill Price (engineer), Bryan Ferry, Brian Eno, and Chris Thomas (producer)
Bottom, far left Andy Mackay, center background Paul Thompson
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Roxy Music c1973, recording sessions for the album 'For Your Pleasure'
Top (L-to-R): John Porter (temp bassist), Bill Price (engineer), Bryan Ferry, Brian Eno, and Chris Thomas (producer)
Bottom, far left Andy Mackay, center background Paul Thompson

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Roxy Music - More Than This (1982) Bryan Ferry from: "More Than This" / "India" (Single) "Avalon" (LP|CD)
Art Rock | Sophisti-Pop
FLAC File @Archive (left click = play) (857kbps) (Size:27.9 MB)
Personnel: Bryan Ferry: Lead Vocals / Keyboards Phil Manzanera: Lead Guitar Neil Hubbard: Guitar Andy Mackay: Saxophone Alan Spenner: Bass Jimmy Maelen: Percussion Andy Newmark: Drums
Fonzi Thornton: Backing Vocals Produced by Rhett Davies / Roxy Music
Album Recorded: @ Compass Point Studios in Nassau, Bahamas @ The Power Station in New York City, New York USA 1981–1982
Single Released: March 26, 1982 Album Released: on May 28, 1982 EG / Polydor Records (UK) ATCO Records (US)
Bryan Ferry by Brian Aris
Newcastle-Upon -Tyne, 1975.
Too much cheesecake too soon!
Brian Eno's debut solo album was released on 8 February 1974.
After increasing friction with Bryan Ferry, Eno left Roxy Music in 1973 (after their tour in support of the group's second album, For Your Pleasure) and collaborated with Robert Fripp on No Pussyfooting (recorded in 3 days and released in November 1973).
Here Come the Warm Jets was recorded in September 1973, and Fripp appears on 3 of the album's 10 tracks (and co-writer of "Blank Frank"). Roxy Music members Phil Manzanera and Andy Mackay also play on the album.
The album received mostly positive reviews (although Rolling Stone called it "annoying" and "baloney"), and was ranked #19 on the Village Voice's annual Pazz and Jop Poll. It's status and influence has only grown since its release and is frequently cited as one of the best albums of the 1970s and one of the best of all time (Rolling Stone has place it on its best 500 list since 2003).

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(via The Musical Masterstrokes Of Netflix's 'Babylon Berlin')
“Bryan Ferry crooning “Bitter-Sweet.” at the Moka Efti cabaret club. This artfully selected song “Bitter-Sweet”, is a Bryan Ferry-Andy Mackay composition from the fourth Roxy Music album Country Life (1974). It’s a melancholic love lament, full of Sturm und Drang, in which Ferry suddenly rasps out a sardonic German verse about love’s renewability. It’s Ferry’s Marlene Dietrich moment.”
- Article excerpt from The Culture Trip.