On Time - Musicians

Musicians

  • Mark Farner - vocals, guitar, harmonica, piano
  • Don Brewer - vocals, drums
  • Mel Schacher - bass
Grand Funk Railroad
  • Don Brewer
  • Mel Schacher
  • Max Carl
  • Bruce Kulick
  • Tim Cashion
  • Mark Farner
  • Craig Frost
  • Dennis Bellinger
  • Howard Eddy Jr.
Studio albums
  • On Time
  • Grand Funk
  • Closer to Home
  • Survival
  • E Pluribus Funk
  • Phoenix
  • We're an American Band
  • Shinin' On
  • All the Girls in the World Beware!!!
  • Born to Die
  • Good Singin', Good Playin'
  • Grand Funk Lives
  • What's Funk?
  • Monumental Funk
Live albums
  • Live Album
  • Caught in the Act
  • Bosnia
  • Live: The 1971 Tour
Compilations
  • Mark, Don & Mel: 1969–71
  • Grand Funk Hits
  • Capitol Collectors Series
  • Thirty Years of Funk: 1969–1999
  • Classic Masters
  • Greatest Hits
Singles
  • "Inside Looking Out"
  • "I'm Your Captain (Closer to Home)"
  • "Feelin' Alright"
  • "Gimme Shelter"
  • "We're an American Band"
  • "The Loco-Motion"
  • "Some Kind of Wonderful"
  • "Bad Time"
Related
  • Discography
  • Terry Knight
  • Terry Knight and the Pack


Read more about this topic:  On Time

Famous quotes containing the word musicians:

    How are we to know that a Dracula is a key-pounding pianist who lifts his hands up to his face, or that a bass fiddle is the doghouse, or that shmaltz musicians are four-button suit guys and long underwear boys?
    In New York City, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    We stand in the tumult of a festival.
    What festival? This loud, disordered mooch?
    These hospitaliers? These brute-like guests?
    These musicians dubbing at a tragedy,
    A-dub, a-dub, which is made up of this:
    That there are no lines to speak? There is no play.
    Wallace Stevens (1879–1955)

    As if the musicians did not so much play the little phrase as execute the rites required by it to appear, and they proceeded to the necessary incantations to obtain and prolong for a few instants the miracle of its evocation, Swann, who could no more see the phrase than if it belonged to an ultraviolet world ... Swann felt it as a presence, as a protective goddess and a confidante to his love, who to arrive to him ... had clothed the disguise of this sonorous appearance.
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)