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The Krush Groove soundtrack was released on Warner Bros. Records in 1985 and featured songs from the movie. Only 1,000 copies of the album were ever pressed on compact disc. [citation needed] The film was nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Original Song for the song "All You Can Eat".
1985 "Peace in Our Life" by Frank Stallone—Rambo: First Blood Part II—music by Frank Stallone, Peter Schless and Jerry Goldsmith, lyrics by Frank Stallone "All You Can Eat" by The Fat Boys —Krush Groove—music by Kurtis Blow and The Fat Boys "The Last Dragon" by Dwight David—The Last Dragon—music and lyrics by Norman Whitfield and ...
The 5th Golden Raspberry Awards were held on March 24, 1985, at Vine Street Elementary School in Hollywood, California, to recognize the worst the movie industry had to offer in 1984. Classic German silent film Metropolis was nominated for two Razzies, both for Giorgio Moroder 's new score for the 1984 re-release.
The song was featured in the 1985 movie “Krush Groove,” and it reached number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Her appearance in the film during a performance scene, which was used partly ...
Inaugural winner of the Independent Spirit Award for Best Feature Nominee of the Palme d'Or distribution with The Geffen Company only; produced by Double Play Productions [21] October 25, 1985: Krush Groove: co-production with Crystalite Productions November 1, 1985: Eleni [note 3] North American theatrical distribution only; produced by CBS ...
Rubin won the award again in 2009, for production work for Metallica, Neil Diamond, Ours, Jakob Dylan, and Weezer in 2008. In 2007 and 2012 , Rubin won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year . The former was for his work on the Chicks album Taking the Long Way and the latter came for his contribution to Adele 's album 21 .
Find out who was originally supposed to record “The Message,” why Sugar Hill Records rejected a legendary film director’s video for “White Lines,” why Chuck D considers “Christmas ...
The song is a duet between both singers and it appears on Sheila E.'s 1985 album Romance 1600. It clocks in at 12:16, but the single version is 3:46 in duration. It made its debut in the music movie Krush Groove. The song was a major hit and reached number one on the Urban radio airplay and Dance/Club play charts. [3]