Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Gerard Hugh "Leo" Sayer (born 21 May 1948) [2] is an English-Australian singer and songwriter who has been active since the early 1970s. He has been an Australian citizen and resident since 2009. Sayer launched his career in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s and became a top singles and album act on both sides of the Atlantic in that decade ...
The Bee Gees are known to have performed and/or recorded a number of songs and other instrumentals which have never been officially released on a single or album. The group's unreleased works were later recorded by well-known artists such as P. P. Arnold, Leo Sayer, Percy Sledge and others.
The song was released as the second single from World Radio, Sayer's ninth studio album, in 1982.The single was released by Chrysalis and Warner Bros. Records.It was later included on Sayer's 1993 compilation album All the Best, as well as other subsequent compilation album releases such as The Best of Leo Sayer (2002) and Endless Journey – The Essential Leo Sayer (2004).
Leo Sayer's version of "More Than I Can Say" spent five weeks at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in December 1980 into January 1981. [8] Sayer's version of the song was certified gold by the RIAA. [8] It also spent three weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart. [4]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
"Long Tall Glasses (I Can Dance)" is a 1974 song by Leo Sayer, co-written with David Courtney. It was released in the United Kingdom in late 1974, becoming Sayer's third hit record on both the British and Irish singles charts and reaching number four in both nations. [2] It was included on Sayer's album Just a Boy.
Greenwell underlined his point. “It’s being alive,” he said dismissively. “But you’re not clean and sober.” As the broader war on drugs is being reconsidered — even in conservative states like Kentucky — officials have concluded that an incarceration-first strategy is not only costly but also bad policy.
The collection reached number 26 in the UK Albums Chart, [3] marking Sayer's return to that chart after almost a decade's absence [3] and becoming his twelfth UK Albums Chart entry. [ 3 ] According to AllMusic , All the Best "lives up to its title, offering 17 of Leo Sayer's most popular pop efforts, including each of his Top 40 singles ".