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Year Album details Chart positions Certifications US [1]1975 Ambrosia. Released: February 1975; Labels: 20th Century Formats: CD, LP, CS, digital download 22 1976 Somewhere I've Never Travelled
The same year, Ambrosia released their fifth and final studio album, Road Island (May 1982 [12]), their first effort without the assistance of Freddie Piro's production company. Produced by James Guthrie, the album consisted of intense, driving hard rock (outside of the soft ballad "Feeling Alive Again" and the progressive rock closer "Endings ...
The album peaked at No. 25 on the Billboard 200, continuing the success of the band. Among the three singles, "Biggest Part of Me" and "You're the Only Woman" were top 20 hits, peaking at No. 3 and No. 13 on the Billboard Hot 100, respectively. The album also earned the band three Grammy nominations, including Best Pop Vocal Group. [3] [4]
Ambrosia is the debut album by Ambrosia. It was released in 1975 on 20th Century Fox Records. It spawned the top 20 chart single "Holdin' on to Yesterday" as well as the minor hit "Nice, Nice, Very Nice". The latter sets to music the lyrics to a poem in Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle.
The cover was highly controversial and remains so: in 2008, the album’s Wikipedia page was placed on a blacklist by the Internet Watch Foundation as they believed the image could be regarded as ...
"Biggest Part of Me" is a song by American band Ambrosia, from the album One Eighty. Released as a single in 1980, the song reached number one on the Radio & Records chart [3] and number 3 on both the US Billboard Hot 100 [4] and Adult Contemporary charts. The song was written by band member David Pack.
Marsha Ambrosius was done with the demands required of a successful R&B star, including the wear-and-tear of touring and fickle music industry politics. So, it felt like a one night-only moment ...
"You're the Only Woman (You & I)" is a song by American soft rock band Ambrosia, released in 1980 as the second single from the album One Eighty. The song was their fifth and final U.S. top 40 hit, peaking at No. 13 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 [ 2 ] and No. 5 on the Adult Contemporary chart during late summer/early fall of 1980.