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US/Canadian Release: Words and Music by Bob Dylan; 3 — — — — — Hollies Sing Hollies: Released: November 1969; Origin: UK; Label: Parlophone (PCS 7092) Format: stereo LP; US/Canadian Release: He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother — 20 38 — — 32 Confessions of the Mind: Released: November 1970; Origin: UK; Label: Parlophone (PCS 7116 ...
Singer Allan Clarke left The Hollies after the release of their previous album A Crazy Steal in 1978. During his absence, the band worked with Gary Brooker of Procol Harum. They recorded his (and Keith Reid) song "Harlequin" with B. J. Wilson on drums, due to the illness of the Hollies’ drummer Bobby Elliott.
The Hollies' Greatest Hits is a compilation of singles by the Hollies, released on Epic Records in April 1973. It includes hit singles by the group on both the Epic and Imperial labels over a time span of 1965 to 1971. It spent seven weeks on the Billboard 200 charts, peaking at number 156.
It should only contain pages that are The Hollies songs or lists of The Hollies songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories).
It should only contain pages that are The Hollies albums or lists of The Hollies albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Hollies albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
For Certain Because is the fifth UK album by the Hollies and their second released in 1966. [4] [5] It was the first Hollies album in which all the songs were written by members Allan Clarke, Graham Nash, and Tony Hicks, and the first on which they did not use the songwriting pseudonym "L. Ransford" (or just "Ransford").
The album was released by Imperial Records in the US in May 1967 [1] and by Capitol Records in Canada, under the title The Hits of the Hollies and with two different tracks, in July 1967. [2] It was the Hollies' highest charting album in the US, peaking at number eleven during a chart stay of forty weeks. [ 3 ]
The album was a follow-up to the successful Romany LP, which The Hollies had released with Mikael Rickfors in 1972. According to the recollections of drummer Bobby Elliott, the album was inspired by the band's frequent tours to the United States, where the Hollies' previous singles such as "Long Cool Woman in a Black Dress", "Long Dark Road" and "Magic Woman Touch" had a much greater impact ...