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Bad Animals is the ninth studio album by American rock band Heart, released on May 15, 1987, by Capitol Records. [6] The album continues the mainstream hard rock style from the band's 1985 self-titled release, all while enjoying similar success.
Heart's next album, Bad Animals (1987), continued the move away from the band's folk and acoustic leanings towards a glossier arena rock sound. [40] The lead single, the power ballad " Alone ", became Heart's most successful song, spending three weeks at number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, while also hitting number 2 on the Billboard Adult ...
The discography of the American rock band Heart consists of ... 1987 1 3 2 6 1 6 3 BPI ... writer Sue Ennis as a fellow band member. Their second full-length album ...
"Alone" spent three weeks at No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 in July 1987. It ranked No. 2 on the Billboard Year-End Top Pop Singles of 1987. It is also Heart's most successful single in the United Kingdom, where it peaked at No. 3 on the UK Singles Chart in June, representing a commercial breakthrough for the band there as their first top ...
Heart — the pioneering band that melds Nancy Wilson’s shredding guitar with her sister Ann’s powerhouse vocals — is hitting the road this spring and fall for a world tour that Nancy Wilson ...
Heart's fifth album, Bébé le Strange, was released on Valentine's Day 1980. [37] The band's sixth album, Private Audition, was released in June 1982 and sold only 400,000 copies; it peaked at number 25 on Billboard. [38] After their series of platinum and gold albums, this was considered a flop. [39]
Heart is the eighth studio album by American rock band Heart, released on June 21, 1985, by Capitol Records. [8] [9] The album continued the band's transition into mainstream rock, a genre that yielded the band its greatest commercial success. Marking the band's Capitol Records debut, it became Heart's only album to top the US Billboard 200 to date
Heart's version of her song became the band's eighth U.S. top-ten single, peaking at number seven. [3] It also climbed to number thirty in the UK Singles Chart, where it was also available as a 12" single. An extended rock version of the song was Heart's first UK CD single release. [4] Cash Box called it a "powerful melodic rocker." [5]