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"Never Can Say Goodbye" is a song written by Clifton Davis and originally recorded by the Jackson 5. The song was originally written and intended for the Supremes ; however, Motown decided it would be better for the Jackson 5.
Never Can Say Goodbye: The Music of Michael Jackson is an album by jazz organist Joey DeFrancesco, a tribute to deceased entertainer Michael Jackson. [1] The album was released in 2010 on HighNote Records and was produced by DeFrancesco and Glenn Ferracone. It was nominated for the 2011 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Jazz Album.
Maybe Tomorrow is the fifth studio album by the Jackson 5, released on April 12, 1971 by Motown. Released after the success of the hit ballad "I'll Be There", most of the tracks on the album are ballads, with few dance numbers. The album includes the hit singles "Never Can Say Goodbye" and "Maybe Tomorrow".
The Jackson 5’s fifth album is best remembered for ballads like “Never Can Say Goodbye,” but the brothers still summon the youthful exhilaration of their early hits on “My Little Baby ...
Never Can Say Goodbye" is a song written by Clifton Davis and originally recorded by The Jackson 5. Never Can Say Goodbye may also refer to: Never Can Say Goodbye (Gloria Gaynor album), a 1975 album by Gloria Gaynor; Never Can Say Goodbye: The Music of Michael Jackson, a 2010 album by American jazz organist Joey DeFrancesco
Looking Back to Yesterday is a compilation album released on February 11, 1986, featuring tracks from American singer Michael Jackson during his tenure at Motown in the late 1960s and early 1970s, both by himself and with The Jackson 5. As part of Motown's Never-Before-Released series, all songs were previously unreleased except for "Love's ...
Powers praised the film for showing "intimate views" of Jackson, like his "vulnerable moments" during performances and felt the film was made "to honor not just the memory of Jackson but the hard work of a big cast and crew that never made it to opening night", which she felt mostly is a tribute to the "power of Jackson's body and voice". [104]
Samuel L. Jackson is the latest celebrity to weigh in on Joe Rogan's past use of the N-word, which the controversial podcaster called the "most regretful and shameful thing I've ever had to talk ...