Music Appreciation
Related: About this forumHappy 71st birthday, Philip Geoffrey Targett-Adams. You know him as Phil Manzanera.
Last edited Sun Feb 6, 2022, 07:54 PM - Edit history (1)
Sun Jan 31, 2021: Happy 70th birthday, Philip Geoffrey Targett-Adams. You know him as Phil Manzanera.
Fri Jan 31, 2020: Happy 69th birthday, Philip Geoffrey Targett-Adams. You know him as Phil Manzanera.
Wed Jan 31, 2018: Happy 67th birthday, Philip Geoffrey Targett-Adams. You know him as Phil Manzanera.
I love this guy.
Phil Manzanera (born Philip Geoffrey Targett-Adams, 31 January 1951) is an English musician and record producer. He was the lead guitarist with Roxy Music, 801, and Quiet Sun. In 2006 Manzanera co-produced David Gilmour's album On an Island and played in Gilmour's band for tours in Europe and North America. He wrote and presented a series of 14 one-hour radio programmes for station Planet Rock entitled The A-Z of Great Guitarists.
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Music career
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Roxy Music (19711983)
Manzanera was determined to join a professional band, and in October 1971 he was one of about twenty players who auditioned as lead guitarist for the recently formed art rock band Roxy Music. Manzanera displayed a wide-ranging interest in music. Influenced by his childhood sojourns in Latin America, and his stints at boarding school, he came to know several prominent musicians including Soft Machine's Robert Wyatt and Pink Floyd's David Gilmour, who was a friend of his older brother.
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His bandmates at this time were Bryan Ferry, Brian Eno, Paul Thompson, Andy Mackay, and Graham Simpson. Roxy Music's rise was meteoric, with the band being hailed as a major stylistic influence of the early 1970s. During the next 12 years, until 1983 when the band members went on a "long break," Roxy Music released a series of internationally best-selling albums, achieving ten UK Top Ten albums and touring extensively throughout the world. Although Ferry had sole writing credit on the first two LPs, and his work writing dominated the group's output, Manzanera was credited as co-writer with Ferry on the following Roxy Music songs:
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Solo work and collaborations (19752001)
As a writer, producer and solo artist, Phil Manzanera has worked with many of the luminaries of modern music, such as Steve Winwood, David Gilmour, John Cale, Godley & Creme, Nico and John Wetton. He has co-written material with many artists, including Brian Eno, Tim Finn, Robert Wyatt and Gilmour. Manzanera co-wrote Pink Floyd's single "One Slip" from their 1987 A Momentary Lapse of Reason album.
Manzanera's first solo album Diamond Head (1975) featured an all-star line-up of session contributors, including most of the former and current members of Roxy Music, except Bryan Ferry. Brian Eno co-wrote and sang on two tracks ("Big Day" and "Miss Shapiro" ), Paul Thompson, Eddie Jobson and Andy Mackay all contributed, and Roxy's occasional tour bassist John Wetton (ex Family, and then a member of King Crimson) played bass and duetted on vocals (with Doreen Chanter on "Same Time Next Year" ). Robert Wyatt co-wrote and sang (in Spanish) on "Frontera", and the members of Manzanera's pre-Roxy group Quiet Sun featured on the instrumental tracks. Concurrent with the recording of Diamond Head, Manzanera reunited Quiet Sun (who had not been able to make any professional recordings) and used the studio time to quickly record a full LP of Quiet Sun material, released by EG Records under the title Mainstream.
Reworked versions of two tracks from Mainstream featured on Manzanera's next major collaboration, the critically acclaimed concert recording 801 Live, which was recorded at a 1976 London show performed by the "special occasion" band 801. The group comprised Manzanera, with Eno on vocals, synth and treatments, Quiet Sun bassist Bill McCormick, Curved Air keyboardist Francis Monkman, 19-year-old drumming prodigy Simon Phillips, and slide guitarist Lloyd Watson, who had previously performed as a solo support act for Roxy Music. The LP featured an eclectic mix of Manzanera, Quiet Sun and Eno originals, alongside distinctive cover versions of two well-known tracks, The Beatles' "Tomorrow Never Knows" and The Kinks' "You Really Got Me". The album also broke new ground in live concert recording, being one of the first live LPs to use the "direct injection" (DI) method of recording, in which the signals from the various electric instruments were fed directly into the recording console, enabling a dramatic improvement in fidelity over the earlier method of placing microphones near the various instrument amplifiers.
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My favorite song, from my favorite album. I think this way outdoes the original:
175,144 views Nov 11, 2012
mybikemybike
429 subscribers
801 was an experimental rock group that formed in 1976, featuring Brian Eno. The group was formed to perform three live concerts, the first of which featured a rearrangement of Lennon's "Tomorrow Never Knows."
Another fave, from probably my second favorite album:
62,624 views Mar 26, 2011
SeagreenSerenade
11.5K subscribers
Catchy number and underrated Eno vocal part off of " Diamond Head", first solo album done by the crafty guitarist of Roxy Music... Eno fans will love it, a real ear candy to enjoy !
And a few things from Roxy Music. The audio is from the album, and the video is from their Musikladen performance on January 23, 1974:
496,429 views Jun 29, 2010
Cowbananas
4.35K subscribers
79,616 views Feb 17, 2012
sbalestrato999
166 subscribers
Versione super-mozzata con con coriste prese a Porta Nuova

The Polack MSgt
(13,555 posts)This is the thread that started the tradition.
Good morning!
mahatmakanejeeves
(64,302 posts)Well, thanks.
Good morning.
The Polack MSgt
(13,555 posts)More accurately, it's the 1st I remember
mahatmakanejeeves
(64,302 posts)Someone long ago pointed out that that practice didn't make a lot of sense.
ProfessorGAC
(72,288 posts)Phil was such a team player. He just texturized & added to the rhythm.
Others who followed were guys like Andy Summers (The Police), Mike Rutherford (Genesis), or Jamie West-Oram (The Fixx). Just taste on top of taste.
mahatmakanejeeves
(64,302 posts)From This Day in Music:
English singer, bassist, and songwriter John Wetton died in his sleep at his home in Bournemouth, Dorset, UK from colon cancer. He rose to fame with bands Mogul Thrash, Family, King Crimson, Roxy Music, Uriah Heep, and Wishbone Ash. After his period with King Crimson, Wetton formed UK, and later he was the frontman and principal songwriter of the supergroup Asia. Their biggest hit 'Heat of the Moment', reached No. 4 in the US in 1982.