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The first two ABC singles were "Let's Break Up for a While" and "Thank You for Loving Me", but the group did not return to the charts until 1965's "Gotta Have Your Love", peaking at #33 on the R&B Singles chart and #77 on the Hot 100. [2] The single's backing vocalists were Valerie Simpson, Nick Ashford, and Melba Moore. [3] [4]
Toggle Music subsection. 1.1 Albums. ... "Who Do You Love", 1964 song by the Sapphires ... a 1978 album by KC and the Sunshine Band "Who You Love", ...
The Sapphires: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is a soundtrack album for the film The Sapphires (2012), released on 27 July 2012 by Sony Music Australia. It features the vocals of Jessica Mauboy, Jade MacRae, Lou Bennett, Juanita Tippens and Darren Percival, with Mauboy singing in ten of the sixteen songs. [1]
The Sapphires is a 2012 Australian musical comedy-drama film based on the 2004 stage play The Sapphires by Tony Briggs, which is loosely based on a real-life 1960s girl group that included Briggs' mother and aunt. [4] The film is directed by Wayne Blair and written by Keith Thompson and Briggs.
The accompanying music video for "Gotcha" was directed by Samuel Leighton-Dore and shot mainly in black-and-white. [18] [19] It premiered on Vevo on 16 July 2012. [19] The video features Mauboy inside a recording studio performing with a band playing instruments to the song. Scenes from The Sapphires are intercut throughout the video. [19]
Sapphire, a band that includes members of the band Alyson Avenue; The Sapphires (American band), a 1960s American pop group; The Sapphires (Australian band), a 1960s Aboriginal Australian trio of female singers; The Sapphhires (backing vocalists), a 1950s male Australian trio of backing singers, worked with Col Joye
Mayers was born in 1941, [1] of Yorta Yorta and Wiradjuri heritage. [2]She was one of three members of The Sapphires, along with Beverly Briggs (her sister) and Laurel Robinson, in the 1960s.
The song contains a sample of "Who Do You Love" by Bernard Wright. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] It was the group's highest chart appearance on the Billboard Hot 100 , peaking at #50 in 1996. [ 5 ]