Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Printed on the back cover among the album's song lyrics is the text for the non-album track "Tubes Talk". [11] The track is a spoken introduction (read by Fee Waybill) that preceded the non-album song "What's Wrong With Me" on the B-side of several regions' "Talk to Ya Later" single releases. [12]
"Don't Want to Wait Anymore" is a song recorded by the Tubes in 1980. It was the lead single from their fourth studio LP, The Completion Backward Principle.Unlike most of their songs which typically feature Fee Waybill, lead vocals are provided by Bill Spooner, the lead guitar player.
Talk To You Later" is a phrase that is often used as a substitute for "goodbye". Talk To You Later may also refer to: "Talk To Ya Later", a song by The Tubes on their album The Completion Backward Principle; TTYL, an internet slang acronym of the phrase; ttyl, a 2004 novel by Lauren Myracle
Talk to Ya Later; W. White Punks on Dope This page was last edited on 3 April 2018, at 00:39 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Dave Connolly of AllMusic favourably claimed "producer David Foster and even more members of Toto help the Tubes punch up their new radio-ready sound with added energy. If their last record showed a newfound dancefloor sensibility, Outside Inside is absolutely funky."
Language links are at the top of the page. Search. Search
"She's a Beauty" was released as the debut single from the band's 1983 album, Outside Inside, with the non-album track "When You're Ready to Come" on the B-side.Continuing the more pop friendly direction of the band's previous album, the song became the band's biggest chart hit.
The Tubes is the first album by the Tubes.Songs which received significant airplay from this album include "What Do You Want from Life?" and "White Punks on Dope", the latter of which peaked at number 28 on the UK singles chart. [3]