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A.C. Moore was an American arts and crafts retail chain, owned by Nicole Crafts. It had 145 retail locations in the eastern United States , with corporate headquarters in Berlin, New Jersey . [ 1 ] On November 25, 2019, A.C. Moore announced that it would wind down its operations, closing all stores, and selling selected leases and other assets ...
In 2017, Moore released her seventh studio album The Rise of the Phoenix which peaked at number 46 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums Sales chart. Lead single "Real One" peaked at number 10 on the US Adult R&B Songs chart and number 39 on the US R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart; making "Real One" Moore's highest appearance on both charts since "Bitter" (2000 ...
The album gave Moore another US Top 20 R&B hit with the single "Old School Lovin'". A remake of the Alicia Myers hit "I Want to Thank You," appeared as well as a medley/mash-up of the Deniece Williams song "Free" and the Commodores song "Sail On". "Mood" was included on the soundtrack to the 1994 feature film Beverly Hills Cop III.
The album's lead single: "You Stepped Into My Life", ranked as high as #5 on the Billboard ranking of top disco songs which success translated into Moore's strongest showing on Billboard's Hot 100 and R&B charts with respective peaks of #47 and #17: Moore would have number of higher ranked R&B chart singles during the 1980s but "You Stepped ...
Moore is More is the sixth studio album by American R&B singer Chanté Moore.It was released by Shanachie Records on July 30, 2013. [1] Moore's first and only release with Shanachie, the album featured production from Louis Biancaniello, Sam Watters, Midi Mafia, Kwamé, Chris Davis, 808N, Dre Manuel, and others.
A far bluesier version of the song also showed up on the posthumous Gary Moore album How Blue Can You Get. As a nod to Corridors of Power , American guitarist Jeff Kollman named his 2012 solo album Silence in the Corridor , the title track of which is a tribute to Moore.
It should only contain pages that are Chanté Moore albums or lists of Chanté Moore albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Chanté Moore albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Moore claims he drew inspiration for the album from Motown music and also '70s classic rock music. [8] The songs "Plead the Fifth" and "The Bull" were not written in any part by Moore, which makes Slowheart Moore's first release to feature songs not written or co-written by him. [9] Moore said of the album's theme that: