Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Baby Love" is a song by the American music group the Supremes from their second studio album, Where Did Our Love Go. It was written and produced by Motown 's main production team Holland–Dozier–Holland [ 1 ] and was released on September 17, 1964.
"Baby Love" was released from September 18, 2007, by A&M and Interscope Records, as the second single from Scherzinger's unreleased debut studio album, Her Name Is Nicole. The folk -inspired R&B ballad is about a person's first premature love with someone.
In 1990, no longer with Atlantic, she released her final single "Track You Down". Plans to release an album titled Best Kept Secret the same year were shelved indefinitely. [7] In 1991, Australian singer Dannii Minogue released a cover of "Baby Love" as a single, reaching number 14 on the UK Singles Chart. [8]
"Baby Love" was covered by Australian singer Dannii Minogue for her debut album, Love and Kisses (1991). Minogue recorded her version for the European release of her album and its original pop mix can be found on the single released by MCA, Universal and Mushroom. The song was produced by Les Adams, Emma Freilich and Andy Whitmore.
The babyface image was later adopted as a logo for Zoo TV Tour memorabilia and was incorporated into the Zooropa album cover. [112] In 2003, music television network VH1 ranked Achtung Baby ' s sleeve at number 39 on its list of the "50 Greatest Album Covers". [113] Bono has called the sleeve his favourite U2 cover artwork. [114]
The critically acclaimed album, which is considered her long-awaited mainstream breakthrough, also inspired the fashion trend "Brat Girl Summer" as the cover art and multiple songs went viral last ...
Darlene Love’s annual television performance of “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” was essentially orphaned after “Late Show With David Letterman” went off the air in 2015, putting an ...
"My Baby Loves Lovin'" was first released by the British pop group White Plains. The song was written and produced by Roger Cook and Roger Greenaway, recorded on 26 October 1969, and released on 2 January 1970 on the Decca Records imprint, Deram Records. [2] It is a world-wide chart success and the top selling single for White Plains.