Todd Rundgren Discography - Production

Production

  • Great Speckled Bird (1969) - Great Speckled Bird
  • The American Dream (1970) - The American Dream
  • Stage Fright (1970) – The Band
  • Straight Up (1971) – Badfinger
  • Halfnelson (1971) - Sparks
  • New York Dolls (1973) – New York Dolls
  • We're an American Band (1973) – Grand Funk Railroad
  • Mother's Pride (1973) – Fanny
  • War Babies (1974) – Hall & Oates
  • Felix Cavaliere (1974) – Felix Cavaliere
  • Bricks (1975) – Hello People
  • L (1976) – Steve Hillage
  • Bat Out of Hell (1977) – Meat Loaf
  • Remote Control (1978) - The Tubes
  • TRB Two (1979) - Tom Robinson Band
  • Guitars and Women (1979) - Rick Derringer
  • Wave (1979) - Patti Smith Group
  • Wasp (1980) - Shaun Cassidy
  • Walking Wild (1981) - New England
  • Bad for Good (1981) - Jim Steinman
  • Forever Now (1982) – The Psychedelic Furs
  • Party of Two (1983) - Rubinoos
  • Next Position Please (1983) - Cheap Trick
  • Watch Dog (1983) - Jules Shear
  • Zerra 1 (1984) - Zerra
  • Love Bomb (1985) - The Tubes
  • What Is This? (1985) - What Is This?
  • Skylarking (1986) – XTC
  • Dreams of Ordinary Men (1986) - Hunter
  • Yoyo (1987) – Bourgeois Tagg
  • Love Junk (1988) – The Pursuit of Happiness
  • Karakuri House (1989) - La Ppisch
  • Things Here Are Different (1990) – Jill Sobule
  • Cue (1990) - Hiroshi Takano
  • One Sided Story - The Pursuit of Happiness
  • Awakening (1992) - Hiroshi Takano
  • The World's Most Dangerous Party (1993) – Paul Shaffer
  • Halfway Down The Sky (1999) – Splender
  • The New America (2000) - Bad Religion
  • Separation Anxieties (2000) - 12 Rods
  • Cause I Sez So (2009) – New York Dolls

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Famous quotes containing the word production:

    To expect to increase prices and then to maintain them at a higher level by means of a plan which must of necessity increase production while decreasing consumption is to fly in the face of an economic law as well established as any law of nature.
    Calvin Coolidge (1872–1933)

    The growing of food and the growing of children are both vital to the family’s survival.... Who would dare make the judgment that holding your youngest baby on your lap is less important than weeding a few more yards in the maize field? Yet this is the judgment our society makes constantly. Production of autos, canned soup, advertising copy is important. Housework—cleaning, feeding, and caring—is unimportant.
    Debbie Taylor (20th century)

    The society based on production is only productive, not creative.
    Albert Camus (1913–1960)