Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Itchycoo Park" is a song by English rock band Small Faces, written by Steve Marriott and Ronnie Lane. Largely written by Lane, it was among a number of pop songs of the era to make use of flanging , an effect involving, at that time, electro-mechanical processes.
The Best of M People is the first greatest hits album by English dance music band M People, released in 1998.The album contains seventeen tracks, including ten UK top 10 hits and three new songs: "Testify", "Dreaming" (which both reached the UK top 20) [2] and a cover version of The Doobie Brothers' "What a Fool Believes".
M People (stylised as M People) is an English dance music band that formed in 1990 and achieved success throughout most of the 1990s. [2] The name M People is taken from the first letter of the first name of band member Mike Pickering, [ 3 ] who formed the group.
The Best of M People: Released: 3 December 2007; Label: Sony BMG ... "Itchycoo Park" 11 27 — — 55 24 16 21 11 — 1997 "Just for You" 8 110 — 34 76 31 11 23
Bizarre Fruit II is a reissued and expanded version of British band M People's 1994 Bizarre Fruit album, with the single versions of "Search for the Hero" and "Love Rendezvous" in place of the originals, and including the band's cover of the Small Faces' "Itchycoo Park".
It should only contain pages that are M People songs or lists of M People songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about M People songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Testify is a compilation album released only in North America by the British house music band M People.It contains the three new tracks that the band recorded for their British compilation album, The Best of M People, the previous year, and the artwork is taken from the photographs used for that album.
Northern Soul is the debut album by the British dance band M People.It was originally released on 4 November 1991. After the release of the single "Excited", a new song not originally included on the album, it was re-released with an updated track listing in late 1992, reaching number 53 on the UK albums chart.