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What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears? follows that infamous tour and the backlash the band faced upon returning to the states.
What really did in Blood, Sweat & Tears wasn’t politics but Clayton-Thomas’s decision, in 1972, to go solo. The band needed every bit of his sweat and swagger.
The undoing of Blood, Sweat & Tears, and the sax player who saw it all from the horn section By Noah Schaffer Globe correspondent,Updated April 18, 2023, 6:29 p.m.
Advertisement Fascinating film finally tells 'Shakespearean' story of 'what the hell happened' to Blood, Sweat & Tears, an 'early victim' of rock 'n' roll cancel culture "Have I got a story for you.
Answering the question posed by the new documentary What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears? takes only a moment for Bobby Colomby. "They were an unbelievably good band and they were ...
During the spring of 1970, Blood, Sweat & Tears -- then one of the top bands in the world -- embarked on a U.S. State Department-sponsored concert tour behind the Iron Curtain. It did irreparable ...
Blood, Sweat & Tears talk blackmail and backlash in a new trailer for the upcoming documentary about their infamous 1970 Iron Curtain tour.
What happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears, judging by this spurious, somewhat cranky documentary by John Scheinfeld, is that the band faced the unforeseen consequences of its own bad decisions.
John Scheinfeld’s documentary, part exposé, part concert film, probes a controversial 1970 Iron Curtain tour and its impact on the horn-driven jazz-rock band's demise.
Blood Sweat & Tears: What The Hell Happened to Blood Sweat & Tears? album review by Doug Collette, published on April 28, 2023. Find thousands jazz reviews at All About Jazz!