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Hashtag
#50YearsOld
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My birthday is tomorrow
You've got less than a day left... Are you really going to let a woman who's turning 50yo think you don't care about her? After all she does for you?
You suck
#birthdaygirl #50yearsold #findom #throne #surpriseme

throne.com/michelesaysno

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selfie of me in a pub with a pint

selfie of me in a pub with a pint

Well today is the last day of my forty ninth year.
I should be happier tomorrow.
#birthday #50yearsOld

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When Roxy Music released Siren in October 1975, the British art-rock pioneers were already known for fusing avant-garde experimentation with sleek pop sophistication. Fifty years on, Siren remains one of their most enduring works, a record that captured the glamour, chaos and creative electricity of mid-70s rock while propelling the band into the mainstream with Love Is The Drug.

Siren was Roxy Music’s fifth studio album, released through Island Records in the UK and Atco Records in the US. It followed 1974’s Country Life, an album that had further refined Bryan Ferry’s vision of high-style romanticism and sonic elegance. With Siren, Roxy Music found the perfect balance between their earlier experimental textures and the accessible, rhythmic sheen that would define the latter half of their career.

The record’s opening track, Love Is The Drug, remains one of the most iconic songs of the era. Co-written by Ferry and saxophonist Andy Mackay, it became Roxy Music’s biggest hit in America, reaching number 30 on the Billboard Hot 100, and peaked at number two in the UK. The single’s sleek bassline, courtesy of John Gustafson, and its hedonistic lyrical undertone captured the mood of the times, setting a template for sophisticated pop that would influence everyone from Duran Duran to INXS.

When Roxy Music released Siren in October 1975, the British art-rock pioneers were already known for fusing avant-garde experimentation with sleek pop sophistication. Fifty years on, Siren remains one of their most enduring works, a record that captured the glamour, chaos and creative electricity of mid-70s rock while propelling the band into the mainstream with Love Is The Drug. Siren was Roxy Music’s fifth studio album, released through Island Records in the UK and Atco Records in the US. It followed 1974’s Country Life, an album that had further refined Bryan Ferry’s vision of high-style romanticism and sonic elegance. With Siren, Roxy Music found the perfect balance between their earlier experimental textures and the accessible, rhythmic sheen that would define the latter half of their career. The record’s opening track, Love Is The Drug, remains one of the most iconic songs of the era. Co-written by Ferry and saxophonist Andy Mackay, it became Roxy Music’s biggest hit in America, reaching number 30 on the Billboard Hot 100, and peaked at number two in the UK. The single’s sleek bassline, courtesy of John Gustafson, and its hedonistic lyrical undertone captured the mood of the times, setting a template for sophisticated pop that would influence everyone from Duran Duran to INXS.

Roxy Music
Siren
1975
Bryan Ferry
Love is the Drug

#roxymusic #siren #released1975 #bryanferry #loveisthedrug #artrock #music #avantgarde #50yearsold

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Post image

#50YearsOld #cake #birthday #photo #NotMyBirthdayToday #JustAPhotoBecause

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