Misplaced Pages

Biff Rose: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 16:01, 3 June 2005 view sourceBig iron (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers51,527 editsm American← Previous edit Revision as of 18:10, 4 June 2005 view source 216.175.116.151 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Biff Rose''' is an ] singer/songwriter who was mainly active during the ] and ]. '''Biff Rose''' is an ] singer/songwriter who was mainly active during the ] and ].


Rose is an intriguing figure from the sixties and seventies ] scene, though he was not in any way truly ever a "folkie". Rose first grew to fame as a writer with ] for various television sketch shows. Eventually, he moved back to the songwriting that had developed during his youth growing up in ]. A song written with ], ''Fill Your Heart'', found its way on to a ] record, and eventually, onto ]'s breakout record, '']''. In the meantime, Rose began writing his own lyrics and marrying them to the carnival-esque sounds he produced on the ]. His tendency was comedic diatribes addressing the political climate of the time. Then, at that special juncture every good performer wishes for, luck and talent united, and Biff Rose began a series of twelve intriguing performances on ]'s ]. His albums began to sell more regularly, and his live performances split time as comedic rants as much as they were recitations of his "songs". He recorded sporadically as the seventies wore on, eventually vanishing from the scene. Rose is a fringe figure from the sixties and seventies ] scene, though he was not in any way truly ever a "folkie". Paul 'Biff' Rose first came to fame as a writer with ] for various television sketch shows. Eventually, he moved back to the songwriting he had developed during his youth growing up in ]. A song written with ], ''Fill Your Heart'', found its way on to a ] record, and eventually, onto ]'s breakout record, '']''. In the meantime, Rose began writing his own lyrics and marrying them to the carnival-esque sounds he produced on the ]. His tendency was comedic diatribes addressing the political climate of the time. Then, at that special juncture every good performer wishes for, luck and talent united, and Biff Rose began a series of twelve intriguing performances on ]'s ]. His albums began to sell more regularly, and his live performances split time as comedic rants as much as they were recitations of his "songs". He recorded sporadically as the seventies wore on, eventually vanishing from the scene.


Rose popped up again in the mid nineties with a vanity disc, and began assembling new ]s of his past style, much like the regularlity he had recorded with in the late 60's and early 70's. But these recordings were doused with 'in jokes' the audience of old was not privy to, and the wordplay relied heavily on angry sentiments of a man the world had passed by. Finally, in the year 2000, he was arrested in ] for sexual misconduct with a minor, a boy under the age of eleven. He fled the state to avoid prosecution. Rose popped up again in the mid nineties with a vanity disc, and began assembling new ]s of his past style, much like the regularlity he had recorded with in the late 60's and early 70's. But these recordings were doused with 'in jokes' the audience of old was not privy to, and the wordplay relied heavily on angry sentiments of a man the world had passed by. Finally, in the year 2000, he was arrested in ] for sexual misconduct with a minor, a boy under the age of eleven. He fled the state to avoid prosecution.

Revision as of 18:10, 4 June 2005

Biff Rose is an American singer/songwriter who was mainly active during the 1960s and 1970s.

Rose is a fringe figure from the sixties and seventies folk music scene, though he was not in any way truly ever a "folkie". Paul 'Biff' Rose first came to fame as a writer with George Carlin for various television sketch shows. Eventually, he moved back to the songwriting he had developed during his youth growing up in New Orleans. A song written with Paul Williams, Fill Your Heart, found its way on to a Tiny Tim record, and eventually, onto David Bowie's breakout record, Hunky Dory. In the meantime, Rose began writing his own lyrics and marrying them to the carnival-esque sounds he produced on the piano. His tendency was comedic diatribes addressing the political climate of the time. Then, at that special juncture every good performer wishes for, luck and talent united, and Biff Rose began a series of twelve intriguing performances on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show. His albums began to sell more regularly, and his live performances split time as comedic rants as much as they were recitations of his "songs". He recorded sporadically as the seventies wore on, eventually vanishing from the scene.

Rose popped up again in the mid nineties with a vanity disc, and began assembling new pastiches of his past style, much like the regularlity he had recorded with in the late 60's and early 70's. But these recordings were doused with 'in jokes' the audience of old was not privy to, and the wordplay relied heavily on angry sentiments of a man the world had passed by. Finally, in the year 2000, he was arrested in Florida for sexual misconduct with a minor, a boy under the age of eleven. He fled the state to avoid prosecution.

Category:
Biff Rose: Difference between revisions Add topic