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In 2017, Billboard ranked "You're Not Alone" number 64 in their list of "The 100 Greatest Pop Songs of 1997", praising it as "one of the year's most striking pop singles, with club energy and trip-hop atmospherics, based around Olive's soulful siren call and synths that streak across the production like an electrical storm."
"You're Not Alone" is a song written by Jim Scott [2] and recorded by the band Chicago for their 1988 album Chicago 19, with Bill Champlin singing lead vocals. When released as a single early the following year, the song peaked at #10 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 .
At the 1997 Ivor Novello Awards (28 May 1998), Kellett and Taylor-Firth received the Best Dance Music award for "You're Not Alone". [14] The song was also covered as a 2002 single by German dance producer ATB. During the American leg of the Trickle promotional tour, the band suggested that 60–70% of their audience demographic at the time was gay.
Presley leans down towards her husband in the temple scene of the music video. The music video for "You Are Not Alone" was directed by American director Wayne Isham and was released to ABC, MTV, and BET on July 28, 1995. [35] It begins with a large number of paparazzi taking photographs of Jackson.
The music video premiered on the Star in the Hood (company) Blog on 19 September 2009. [6] The video features Tinchy Stryder in various scenes around empty streets in the London Docklands at night, paralleling Olive's video for the original version in which Tim Kellet, Robin Taylor-Firth and Ruth-Ann Boyle can be seen in similar Paris locations ...
With a few hours left in 2024, the Unstoppable actor took to Instagram to reminisce on her 1998 song “Waiting for Tonight,” even recreating scenes from the music video.
You Are Not Alone (Kinetics & One Love album), 2012; You Are Not Alone (Mavis Staples album) or the title song, 2010; You're Not Alone (Andrew W.K. album) or the title song, 2018 ...
Written and produced by Young, the track runs at 84 BPM and is in the key of D-sharp major. [6] Young's range in the song spans from the notes Eb3 to C5. [7] According to an interview with Power 88 FM radio, the song was inspired after Young read a news report online about a Sudanese woman, who was sentenced to death for her Christian beliefs, but was later rescued. [8]