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"I'll Be Over You" is a hit single by the American rock band Toto. Released as the lead single from their 1986 album, Fahrenheit , the song reached number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1986. Lead vocals were sung by guitarist Steve Lukather , who co-wrote the song with hit songwriter Randy Goodrum (one of several collaborations between ...
Fahrenheit is the sixth studio album by American rock band Toto, released on 20 August 1986, by Columbia Records. [4] [5] It was the first album to feature Joseph Williams on lead vocals, after Fergie Frederiksen, the band's previous vocalist, was fired following the culmination of the Isolation tour. [6]
The Very Best of Toto is a greatest-hits compilation album of the American band Toto, ... "I'll Be Over You" "Waiting For Your Love" "Stranger in Town"
The song had later been recorded by the band's then former singer Joseph Williams and released on his 1997 album 3. The song "In a Word" was first featured on Fahrenheit 's lead single, I'll Be Over You . but it was never part of the album
Toto IV "Africa" "Waiting for Your Love" 1984 "Stranger in Town" Isolation "Holyanna" "Angel Don't Cry" "How Does It Feel" 1986 "I'll Be Over You" (with Michael McDonald) Fahrenheit "Without Your Love" "Till the End" 1988 "Pamela" The Seventh One "Stop Loving You" "Straight for the Heart" 1990 "Out of Love" Past to Present 1977-1990
"I'll Be Over You (Live)" (1993) "I Will Remember" (1995) "Drag Him to the Roof" (1995) "I Will Remember" is a 1995 song performed by Toto from their album Tambu.
Toto is the debut studio album by American rock band Toto, released in October 1978 [5] by Columbia Records. It includes the hit singles "Hold the Line", "I'll Supply the Love" and "Georgy Porgy", all three of which made it into the top 50 in the US. [6] "Hold the Line" spent six weeks in the top 10, and reached number 14 in the UK as well. [7]
Past to Present 1977–1990 is the first compilation album by Toto, released in 1990. It contains nine hit songs from the band's first seven albums, and four new songs recorded with new singer Jean-Michel Byron. According to the band, it was Toto's record label Columbia who proposed the band work with Byron. Ultimately the band was not happy ...