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Songs of Love & Loss is the seventh studio album, and first cover album, by Australian singer and songwriter Tina Arena, released on 1 December 2007.The album was Arena's first full length English language recording in six years and her first album with EMI since her debut Strong as Steel in 1990.
Songs of Love & Loss 2 is the ninth studio album by Australian singer-songwriter Tina Arena, released on 15 November 2008 by EMI in Australia. Her second cover album, it follows on from Songs of Love & Loss, released in 2007, and includes covers of songs by Blondie, Lulu, Alice Cooper and Split Enz among others.
In May 2015, Arena issued Songs of Love & Loss in France. [120] Her eleventh studio album, Eleven, was released on 30 October 2015. [121] It was preceded in September by its lead single, "I Want to Love You". Arena premiered the single by performing on the live television show Dancing with the Stars on 4 September 2015. [122]
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Her cover of Diana Ross's "Love Hangover" appeared on her 2007 album Songs of Love & Loss. "Transparency" was co-written by Arena and Andrew De Silva of Australian R&B group CDB and Paul Cecchinelli who is currently a member of singer Vanessa Amorosi's touring band. Arena penned "No Apology" with production team The Matrix.
This Arena's second French language album. Track 12 is a duet between Arena and Jean-François Bernardini from Corsican folk music group I Muvrini and track 7, "Ta Vie", is a French-language version of "Until" which appeared on her previous English album Songs of Love & Loss .
"The Machine's Breaking Down" is a song by Australian pop singer Tina Arena, released as the second single from her 1990 debut album, Strong as Steel. It peaked at number 23 on the Australian Singles Chart .
AllMusic editor Kelvin Hayes complimented the song as "gorgeous", adding that it "suggests Arena may yet become the Astrud Gilberto of Australia." [3] James Richliano from The Boston Globe wrote in his review of the Don't Ask album, "The sweet innocence is most prominent on "Sorrento Moon (I Remember)", an uptempo gem steeped in breezy calypso rhythms". [4]