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List of singles, with selected chart positions and certifications, showing year released and album name Title Year Peak chart positions Certifications Album US CB [15] [16] US [17] US Main. [18] US AC [19] CAN [2] JPN [6] AUS [20] NZ [21] UK [9] "To Play Some Music" 1975 — — — — — — — — — Journey "On a Saturday Night" 1976 ...
Departure was Journey's highest-charting album to that point, giving them their first appearance in the top 10 of the Billboard 200 album charts, peaking at No. 8. The album includes "Any Way You Want It", the leadoff track and top 25 single. [5] The album featured an edgier sound, thanks partly to the "live in studio" way the songs were ...
Time 3 (also known as Time Cubed) [1] is a 1992 three-CD compilation box set by the American rock band Journey. The tracks are arranged chronologically and include both studio and live tracks. [ 1 ] A booklet documenting the band's history and song details is included.
Stay Awhile (Steve Cole album), 1998 Stay Awhile (The Kingston Trio album) , 1965 Stay Awhile/I Only Want to Be with You , a 1964 album by Dusty Springfield featuring the song "Stay Awhile"
First release: Philips UK single BF 1292 (A-side), 8 November 1963 "Stay Awhile" (Mike Hawker, Ivor Raymonde) – 1:55 First release: Philips UK single BF 1313 (A-side), 7 February 1964 "Twenty Four Hours from Tulsa" (Burt Bacharach, Hal David) – 3:01 First release: UK album A Girl Called Dusty, 17 April 1964
The Ballade is a Japanese-only compilation album by the American rock band Journey. ... from the U.S. releases ... album Departure) "Stay Awhile" - 2:50 ...
The Bells had three Canadian Top Ten singles from their final album, Pisces Rising (Polydor, 1973): "The Singer", "Hey My Love", and "He Was Me, He Was You". Jackie Ralph recruited new members, featuring a new rhythm section with Skip Layton on drums and Will (Wayne) Cardinal on bass; the band took on an edgier, country rock style. [ 9 ]
Journey released a live version of the song in 1993 for the Time³ box set. This recording reached #30 on the Adult Contemporary chart. [10] The song was the last to be played during the Top 40 era of KFRC 610, a legendary San Francisco station, before the flip to a nostalgia/adult standards format in 1986. [11]