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"Where You Lead" is one of two Carole King/ Toni Stern collaborations featured on Tapestry, the other being the #1 single "It's Too Late".King had written the music and the majority of the lyric for "Where You Lead" when she solicited the assistance of Stern, saying: "I can't write the bridge to this: if you can figure out the bridge you can get [co-writing] credit for the song."
Carole King Klein [3] (born Carol Joan Klein; February 9, 1942) is an American singer-songwriter and musician.One of the most successful songwriters in American history, she wrote or co-wrote 118 pop hits appearing on the Billboard Hot 100 over the latter half of the 20th century. [4]
Author James Perone claims that the song still fits into the album by being the one song on which King's piano blends in with the other instruments on the song. [5] Perone regards Danny Kortchmar's electric guitar and Ralph Schuckett's electric piano as the most prominent instruments on the song, [5] but Landau showers most praise on Charlie Larkey's bass guitar and Joel O'Brien's drums.
The discography of Carole King, an American singer-songwriter and musician, consists of 17 studio albums, four live albums, seven compilation albums, one soundtrack album and 33 singles as a lead artist. King has sold over 75 million records worldwide. [1] Billboard ranked her as the 73rd greatest artist of all time. [2]
Tapestry is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter Carole King.Produced by Lou Adler, it was released on February 10, 1971, by Ode Records. [3] The album's lead singles, "It's Too Late" and "I Feel the Earth Move", spent five weeks at number one on both the Billboard Hot 100 and Easy Listening charts.
It's Too Late (Carole King song) J. Jazzman; Just Once in My Life (song) K. ... So Far Away (Carole King song) So Much Love (Ben E. King song) Some Kind of Wonderful ...
Gaar noted that there was a definable Green Day sound to Kerplunk that 39/Smooth lacked, encapsulated by its opening track "2000 Light Years Away". [16] PopMatters contributor Chris Conaton explained this as Armstrong's guitar work being straightforward "but catchy, and Dirnt echoes them without exactly doubling them. Cool keeps the beat steady ...
It features songs such as "It's Going to Take Some Time" (US No. 12 by The Carpenters), "Sweet Seasons", a No. 9 hit for Carole King, and "Brother, Brother". While not as groundbreaking or as successful as King's Tapestry album, Carole King Music experienced immediate success and was certified gold on December 9, 1971, days after release. It ...