top of page


Glam Slam Guide
The Small Face who walked away from stadiums, grew a moustache like a broom, and spent the rest of his life chasing the perfect rootsy, ramshackle, travelling-show vibe. He was the bass-playing heart of the Small Faces and Faces – the one with the bell-bottoms, the cheeky grin, and the voice like a cockney nightingale. When Rod and Ronnie Wood went full rock-star, Lane said “nah”, bought a caravan, formed Slim Chance, and made some of the most beautiful, shambolic, heartfelt

Ronnie Lane
Nov 8


Glam Slam Guide
In the sticky-floored back rooms of 1970s London, where the beer was warm, the shirts were louder than the amps, and the hangover started before the encore even finished… there strutted a gang of piss-taking, booze-soaked, platform-heeled rascals who turned every gig into a glorious pub brawl with guitars. They had a singer who looked like a rock ’n’ roll pirate, a bassist who played like he was trying to wake the dead, and a drummer who hit the skins like he was personally o

Faces
Nov 8


Early Steps Album
Take early steps back to 1960s London with the Faces! with this 1xCD and 1xLP release featuring the band’s first, previously unheard recordings, out on October 31 2025 as a commercial release on CD Take early steps back to 1960s London with Rod Stewart, Ronnie Wood, Kenney Jones, Ronnie Lane and Ian McLagan to the Faces’ first and previously unheard recording session at Olympic Studios in Barnes. Walk by the River Thames to Bermondsey to hear rehearsals in The Rolling Stones’

Faces
Oct 2


Faces: Snakes And Ladders / The Best Of Faces Album (1976)
A Boozy Rock Retrospective Faces’ Snakes And Ladders / The Best Of Faces LP, was released in the UK on October 9, 1976, on Warner Bros. Records (catalogue: K 56172). This 12-track compilation, the band's second official greatest hits collection, gathered their signature rock 'n' roll anthems from 1970–1973, showcasing the chemistry between Rod Stewart and Ronnie Wood. Produced by Glyn Johns and the band, the album captured Faces' loose, pub-rock spirit, peaking at No. 2 on th

Faces
Oct 8, 1976
bottom of page
