The Brett Rosenberg Problem | en

Marianne Rosenberg (b. March 10, 1955 Berlin) is a German Schlager music singer and songwriter. She is the fifth of seven children by Auschwitz survivor Otto Rosenberg, who was part Roma, and recorded her first song, Mr. Paul McCartney, after winning a talent contest at age fourteen. Her major hits include Fremder Mann, Er gehört zu mir (also recorded in English as How Can I Go Now?), Lieder der Nacht and Marleen, all of which were very successful in West Germany in the early and mid-1970s. She also achieved chart success in other European territories including Austria and the Netherlands....
No Problem is a punk band form Alberta, Canada. Sounds like: A zit exploding in your greasy ear hole. And unicorns mating in a wooded glen with squirrels just watching. Ian-Drums and sledding...he;s really good, Steve-Shredding axe, eater of chips and smoker of darts, Graeme-Axe, vocals, trying really hard but failing so miserably that everyone just points and laughs at the freak, Matt-Bass and Dancing with the household cats. .
The Rosenbergs are: David Fagin: Vocal, Guitar Joshua Aaron: Bass, Backing Vocals, Keyboards Joe Mahoney: Guitar, Backing Vocals Andrew Burstein: Drums, Backing Vocals Search the Internet for info on The Rosenbergs and you’ll come across hundreds of articles summarizing a history of bold career moves, the most famous being their rejecting an offer to appear on the much-hyped (and now defunct) Farmclub television show. They then teamed up with Robert Fripp’s label, DGM, to pave the way for artists everywhere to start taking back ownership of their masters. A few months later, while the rest of the music industry was...
The Negro Problem is the brain child of Mark Stewart (aka Stew) and performs an intriguing blend of psychedelic rock, funk, motown r&b, and Bacharach-style pop. The band's name is meant to be ironic, as the music industry doesn't seem to know what to do with a band fronted by a black man that doesn't necessarily perform what gets typically shoehorned as "black music" in the modern segregated music industry. The band tries to harken back to the era of "Jimi Hendrix" and "Sly and the Family Stone", where rock music wasn't just marked as a "white" genre, and lovers...
The Brett Rosenberg Problem, a sort of a ragged vision of Teenage Fanclub and the Replacements doing Jello shots at a bowling alley just south of the Canadian border. Not only did Brett Rosenberg and his band place third in the 2004 WBCN Rock-N-Roll Rumble; the kid opened for John Doe of X and Damien Rice and generally impressed the pants off everyone. From his humble start as a subway busker, he's gone on to tour across the eastern US and the midwest and has released no fewer than five critically acclaimed albums. These days, Rosenberg. 26, finds himself embracing...