(album) 220 is an instrumental album by guitarist Phil Keaggy, released in 1996. She studied music at the London Academy of Operatic Art. After I returned home, I imported all of the loops into Pro Tools and edited some sections, but no overdubs were added either after the initial recording or while in the studio. The double album Premium Jams is a stunning collection of previously unreleased electric instrumentals dating back to the recording sessions for Crimson and Blue and 220. In the most recent issue of Rolling Stone, rocker Melissa Etheridge talks about her spirituality and an encounter she claims to have once had with a guitar virtuoso named Phil Keaggy. They left Leawood in 1983 and settled in Costa Mesa, California. The following year the band released its third album: It Makes Me Glad, which included a version of the old spiritual "Do Lord". Lights of Madrid would go on to win Keaggy a Dove Award for best instrumental album. Keeping with the album's family motif, "Father Daughter Harmony" was a moving duet with daughter Alicia while "The 50th" features Keaggy's guitar playing over excerpts from a vinyl record of his grandparents' 50th wedding anniversary in 1948. And those melodies are even more appreciated when you know the lyrics. Keaggy and Sferra then recruited bass player Daniel Pecchio. So my nephew works in a printing place, and I created this cover that had all the same photos and information inside the CD insert, but I had him make 500 of these new covers, and we took the shrink wrap off500 CDs, andinserted these covers that I wanted and took them on the road and sold them, and we mailed them out through the fan club, since we didn't have a website in those days."[14]. This would begin a trend in which Keaggy would frequently feature a hymn on his albums. Keaggy's recollection of the time frame during which Glass Harp's first album was recorded differs slightly from Glass Harp's officially-published history (which have the recording sessions ending on September 17, 1970, just hours before Hendrix's early-morning death in London, and not two weeks after). It also won Shacklock the EMI Songwriter of the Year award. The following year saw Keaggy work with another group of talented musicians for his next project. In 1968, Keaggy and longtime friend drummer John Sferra, along with bassist Steve Markulin, formed the band Glass Harp. In 2004 Keaggy guest performed with the indie band Dispatch for several songs during The Last Dispatch. The year also saw the release of What Matters, a nine-song compilation drawing mostly from the albums Phil Keaggy and Crimson and Blue.
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