Sweet – Identity Crisis
A glitter era band momentarily stripped of glamour, staring into the uncertainty of who they were becoming. When Sweet released Identity Crisis in 1971, the song arrived quietly, making little…
A glitter era band momentarily stripped of glamour, staring into the uncertainty of who they were becoming. When Sweet released Identity Crisis in 1971, the song arrived quietly, making little…
A portrait of restless longing where a city becomes both refuge and reckoning Released in 1976 on SWEET’s album GIVE US A WINK, WINDY CITY arrived quietly, without the commercial…
A defiant burst of rhythm and swagger that captures a band refusing to be boxed in by its own success Released in 1976, Funk It Up arrived as a UK…
A hard confession of bruised pride and defiant survival, sung by a band at the peak of its combustible power. Released in 1974, Done Me Wrong All Right appears on…
A song that captures the moment when love turns from longing into defiant survival. Released in 1976 by Sweet, Don’t Bring Me Water emerged during a pivotal period in the…
A quiet flight toward freedom, where longing lifts itself above the noise of the world. Released in 1974, Silverbird arrived during a period of transition for Sweet, appearing on the…
A slow burning confession where desire is spoken softly yet felt with unmistakable force. Released during Laura Lee’s celebrated late nineteen sixties period on Chess Records, Sweet arrived as a…
A LONGING FOR THE GOLDEN DAYS DEFINED IN RHYTHM AND REVERIE Sweet’s “Sixties Man” stands as one of the English glam rock band’s most poignant late era reflections, a song…
SWEET POWER AND PROVOCATION SPEAK FOR AN ENTIRE GENERATION Sweet’s rendition of “My Generation”, appearing on their 1974 album Desolation Boulevard, stands as both a tribute to its originators and…
Love’s Quiet Defense: “You’re Not Wrong for Loving Me” as a tender act of affirmation When You’re Not Wrong for Loving Me emerged in 1971 as the B-side to Funny,…