Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Upside Down" is a song written and produced by Chic members Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards. It was recorded by American singer Diana Ross and issued on June 18, 1980, from Motown as the lead single from her eleventh studio album, Diana (1980).
Diana (stylized on the cover as diana) is the eleventh studio album by American singer Diana Ross, released on May 22, 1980, by Motown Records.The album is the best-selling studio album of Ross's career, spawning three international hit singles, including the number-one hit "Upside Down".
Supertonic: Mixes is the second remix album by American singer Diana Ross, released on May 29, 2020, by Universal Music and Motown Records.The album was produced by Eric Kupper.
"Chain Reaction" is a song by American singer Diana Ross, released on November 12, 1985 by RCA and Capitol, as the second single from her sixteenth studio album, Eaten Alive (1985). The song was written by the Bee Gees and contains additional vocals from Barry Gibb .
Upside Down: The Collection is a compilation album by Diana Ross, released by Spectrum Music/Universal in the United Kingdom in 2012. This album is a budget collection containing songs that were released from 1970 through 1981 on Motown Records .
As a lone songwriter/producer, he gave Diana Ross her Top 15 hit, "Telephone" from her 1985 platinum "Swept Away" album released on RCA and Ross' international label, Capitol-EMI. Edwards released a solo album, Glad to Be Here in 1983, and in 1985 he was instrumental in the formation of the supergroup the Power Station .
Diana Ross "Upside Down" Alcazar "This Is the World We Live In" [75] Genesis "Land of Confusion" Dido "Thank You" Rihanna "Never Ending" [76] Kendo Kaponi and Anuel AA "Me contagié" [77] DJ Pied Piper and the Masters of Ceremonies "Do You Really Like It?" KSI feat. Craig David and Digital Farm Animals "Really Love" [78] Tinie Tempah feat. Maia ...
"Upside Down" was a monster Number-One single and "I'm Coming Out" was a top-ten single. It turned out that when the engineer at Motown saw the track listings of Meco 1–2–3–4, he just assumed that Track 1 was THE track and never listened to the others, and so that's what is on the record.