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1973 My Maria (RCA) US 45 [10] 1974 Calabasas (RCA) US 206 [10] 1975 We Be Sailin' (Warner Bros) US 201 [10] 1977 The Best of B.W. Stevenson (RCA) 1977 Lost Feeling (Warner Bros) 1980 Lifeline (Home Sweet Home Records) 1990 Rainbow Down the Road (Amazing Records) 2000 Very Best of B.W. Stevenson (Collectables) 2003 Lead Free/B.W. Stevenson ...
David Kershenbaum, Stevenson's producer at RCA, agreed with Blaskey that it sounded like a hit and produced and released "My Maria" as a single in July 1973. The song became a Top 10 hit, peaking at No. 9 on the US pop chart. It remained in the Top 40 for twelve weeks.
Pages in category "B. W. Stevenson songs" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. ... My Maria; S. Shambala (song) This page was ...
He co-wrote the song "My Maria" with B. W. Stevenson. Recorded by the latter, the song was a pop hit in 1973. Moore also wrote the song "Shambala", a song which was a hit for both B. W. Stevenson and Three Dog Night that same year. "My Maria" was also a country hit in 1996 when recorded by Brooks and Dunn.
The first single from Brooks and Dunn's fourth album, Borderline, was a cover version of B.W. Stevenson's 1972 single "My Maria". [1] Their version of the song spent three weeks at number one in mid-1996 and peaked at number 79 on the Billboard Hot 100; it was also that year's top country song according to the Billboard Year-End charts. [24]
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Borderline is the fourth studio album by American country music duo Brooks & Dunn.Released in 1996 on Arista Records, the album produced five singles on the Hot Country Songs charts for the duo: the Number One hit "My Maria" (a cover of a pop tune originally recorded by B. W. Stevenson), the #2 "I Am That Man", the #13 "Mama Don't Get Dressed Up for Nothing" (their first non-Top 10 single ...
"Shambala" is a song written by Daniel Moore and made famous by two near-simultaneous releases in 1973: the better-known but slightly later recording by Three Dog Night, which reached No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100, and a version by B. W. Stevenson. Its title derives from a mythical place-name also spelled Shamballa or Shambhala.