Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Righteous Brothers' cover of "Unchained Melody" is now widely considered the definitive version of the song. [ 7 ] [ 46 ] Hatfield's vocal in the original recording in particular is highly praised; it has been described as "powerful, full of romantic hunger, yet ethereal," [ 7 ] and a "vocal tour de force", although his later re-recording ...
The Righteous Brothers came over to Britain, spent a week promoting the song and performed for television shows in Manchester and Birmingham. [39] At the same time, Andrew Loog Oldham placed a full-page ad in Melody Maker promoting the Righteous Brothers version at his own initiative and expense, and urged the readers to watch the Righteous ...
The Righteous Brothers Greatest Hits: 1988 "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" b/w "Unchained Melody" Dutch reissue — — 87 — 13 Unchained Melody – The Very Best of The Righteous Brothers: 1990 "Unchained Melody" b/w "Hung on You" Reissue: 13 1 1 4 1 AUS: Platinum [90] UK: Platinum [111] "Unchained Melody" (new 1990 recording for Curb ...
William Thomas Medley (born September 19, 1940) is an American singer best known as one-half of the Righteous Brothers. He is noted for his bass-baritone voice, exemplified in songs such as "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'". Medley produced a number of the duo's songs, including "Unchained Melody" and "(You're My) Soul and Inspiration".
The title track "Just Once in My Life" was the first single released from the album, and it reached No. 9 on the singles chart in May 1965. [4]The single "Unchained Melody" was initially only intended as a B-side for "Hung on You" from the next album Back to Back, but it became popular and it was then released as an A side, reaching at No. 4 in the United States and No. 14 in the United ...
"Ebb Tide" is a popular song written in 1953 by the lyricist Carl Sigman and composer and harpist Robert Maxwell. [1] The first version was sung by Vic Damone backed by Richard Hayman 's orchestra. The highest-selling version was released by the Righteous Brothers in 1965.
After leaving Spector's Philles Records in late 1965, the Righteous Brothers moved to the mostly jazz-oriented Verve label. Bill Medley of the Righteous Brothers then asked Mann about the incomplete "Soul and Inspiration" that the songwriters had played for Medley when they first started writing it, and asked them to complete the song. Mann and ...
Hy Zaret (born Hyman Harry Zaritsky; August 21, 1907 – July 2, 2007) was an American Tin Pan Alley [1] lyricist and composer who wrote the lyrics of the 1955 hit "Unchained Melody", one of the most-recorded songs of the 20th century. [2]