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Greatest Hits (1988, Polydor) The Very Best of Gloria Gaynor: I Will Survive (1993, Polydor) The Collection (1996, Spectrum Music) The Best of Gloria Gaynor (1997, PolyGram) I Will Survive: The Anthology (1998, Polydor) Classic Gloria Gaynor: The Universal Masters Collection (1999, Polydor) 20th Century Masters – The Millennium Collection ...
Many charted on the Hot 100 and R&B charts as well, with songs like "(If You Want It) Do It Yourself"—a No. 1 disco hit—peaking at No. 98 on the Pop Charts and No. 24 on the R&B Charts. Gaynor's cover of " How High the Moon " topped the US Dance Charts, and made the lower parts of both the pop and R&B charts, as well as achieving some ...
Gloria Gaynor scored a #1 hit with "I Will Survive" in 1979. Here are the Billboard Hot 100 number-one hits of 1979. That year, 10 acts earned their first number one song: Gloria Gaynor, Amii Stewart, Blondie, Peaches & Herb, Anita Ward, The Knack, Robert John, M, Styx, and Rupert Holmes; only Blondie would ever have another number one hit.
The artists of the 1970s produced so many chart-topping hits we compiled a list. ... able to create the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart-topper and Grammy-winning song, "Best of My Love" — the group ...
Nearly 50 years ago, Gloria Gaynor released “I Will Survive,” the first disco song to top the Billboard charts and the only one to be awarded a Grammy for best disco recording. Then, 40 years ...
"I Will Survive" is a song recorded by American singer Gloria Gaynor, released in October 1978 by Polydor Records as the second single from her sixth album, Love Tracks (1978). It was written by Freddie Perren and Dino Fekaris .
Song Artist January 6 "Le Freak" † Chic: January 13 January 20 January 27 February 3 "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" Rod Stewart: February 10 February 17 February 24 March 3 March 10 "I Will Survive" Gloria Gaynor: March 17 "Tragedy" Bee Gees: March 24 March 31 April 7 "What a Fool Believes" Doobie Brothers: April 14 April 21 "Knock on Wood" Amii ...
A major version by Gloria Gaynor, re-imagined as a disco record in 1974, was a number-nine hit on the U.S. Pop Singles chart and went to number 34 on the Soul Singles chart. [13] The Gloria Gaynor version became one of the defining recordings of the disco era.