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・ Terry Kilgore
・ Terry Killens
・ Terry Kinard
・ Terry King
・ Terry Kingston
・ Terry Kinney
・ Terry Kirby
・ Terry Kirkbride
・ Terry Kirkland
・ Terry Kirkman
・ Terry Kiser
・ Terry Kitchen
・ Terry Klassen
・ Terry Kleffman
・ Terry Kleisinger
Terry Knight
・ Terry Knight and the Pack
・ Terry Knight and the Pack (album)
・ Terry Kohler
・ Terry Kraft
・ Terry Kubicka
・ Terry Kuntz
・ Terry Kunz
・ Terry Kunze
・ Terry Kurtenbach
・ Terry Kyan
・ Terry L. Anderson
・ Terry L. Bellamy
・ Terry L. Bruce
・ Terry L. Dunn


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Terry Knight : ウィキペディア英語版
Terry Knight

Terry Knight (April 9, 1943 – November 1, 2004), born Richard Terrance Knapp, was an American rock and roll music producer, promoter, singer, songwriter and radio personality, who enjoyed some success in radio, modest success as a singer, but phenomenal success as the original manager-producer for Grand Funk Railroad and the producer for Bloodrock.
==Early career==
Knight was born on April 9, 1943 in Lapeer, Michigan. After graduating from high school in 1961, he briefly attended Alma College before dropping out. Knight's music career began as a Detroit DJ in 1963 when he replaced Dave Shafer as "Jack the Bellboy" on WJBK, coming to Detroit from Flint, Michigan's legendary Top 40 rocker WTAC. The following year, he moved across the river to CKLW in Windsor, Ontario. Arguably the first American DJ to air the Rolling Stones, he hosted a legendary late night show from high-powered CKLW, bringing the British Invasion to the Northern states. He was awarded the honorary title of "The Sixth Stone" for his early support of the Stones. By the end of 1964, however, Knight had left CKLW and the radio business, intending to pursue his own career in music.
Around 1965, Knight fashioned his own songwriting and performing career in Flint by becoming the front man for Terry Knight and the Pack. With this band, Knight recorded a handful of regional hits for local Lucky Eleven Records, part of the Cameo-Parkway Records group, including his self-penned generation gap anthem "A Change On The Way," as well as scoring two national hits, a tasteful cover of the Yardbirds' "(Mister, You're A) Better Man Than I" and his ultra-lounge reading of Ben E. King's "I (Who Have Nothing)" (which came close to making the national top 40, peaking at #46). The band also left behind three long-playing garage classics before breaking up in 1967. (Brownsville Station honored Knight and the Pack with a cover of the Knight-penned "Love, Love, Love, Love, Love" on their '73 album ''Yeah!'')

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