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The albums discography of English singer Cliff Richard consists of 49 studio albums (47 English and 2 German), seven soundtrack albums, three cast recording albums, 13 live albums, one remix album, 17 mainstream compilation albums, 19 budget-priced compilation albums, eight gospel compilation albums, 12 box sets, and 47 EPs. It also includes ...
The singles discography of English singer Cliff Richard consists in excess of 200 singles, of which 159 singles have been released in the UK in varying vinyl, CD, cassette and digital formats. Listed alongside the UK singles in the discography below are a further 20 singles which were released in other territories, as well as 22 singles which ...
Cliff Sings is the second album by Cliff Richard and his first studio album. It was released in November 1959 through EMI Columbia Records and recorded at Abbey Road Studios. [2] It reached No. 2 in the UK album chart. [3] No singles were released from the album in the UK (as was often the case prior to the 1970s).
It should only contain pages that are Cliff Richard albums or lists of Cliff Richard albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Cliff Richard albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
[1] [2] The album celebrates Richard's 35th anniversary in the music industry and compiled all of Richard's top 5 UK hit singles, which coincidentally totalled 35 at the time. Two bonus tracks were also chosen by Richard for the album – " Miss You Nights ", at the request of fans for a re-release, and " Green Light " a favourite of Richard's.
Private Collection: 1979–1988 is a compilation album by Cliff Richard, released in 1988. It features songs such as the number one single "We Don't Talk Anymore" from 1979, to his latest release at the time, the Christmas number one hit "Mistletoe and Wine". [2] The album reached number one on the UK Albums Chart.
The album was preceded by the release of two singles, a reworking of "The Young Ones" and his 100th single, "The Best of Me". Richard has said of the album: "After 65 years in the business, it is really an emotional journey to listen back to some of my original vocals and hear just how young I was and how my style changed over the years.
The album was reviewed by Dave Thompson at AllMusic who wrote that "It's a terrific album, and no mistake". Thompson felt that in comparison to his albums recorded in Italian and Spanish, "Left to his own English language devices, however, Richard's natural vocal powers can scarcely be faulted - even the most practiced rehearsal can sound like an ad lib, and it doesn't matter how many times ...