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Toyah! Toyah! Toyah! is a greatest hits compilation album by the English new wave band Toyah, fronted by Toyah Willcox, released in 1984 by K-tel. The album is also known as Toyah! Toyah! Toyah! All the Hits by including the cover slogan to differentiate it from the earlier live album Toyah! Toyah! Toyah!.
Wilcox at a concert in Spencerville, Ontario in 2006. Motivated by the success of his tour and two gold records, Wilcox went back into the studio in 1984 to record Bad Reputation. A year later he released The Best of David Wilcox, his first compilation album, as a hit-inspired collection of his songs. It was also the debut album for "Blood ...
The single and its B-side "Laughing with the Fools" were not included on an album at the time, though both would eventually be included on the 2005 reissue of Love Is the Law, while the title track became the lead song on the 1998 compilation The Best of Toyah: Proud, Loud & Heard, hand-picked by Toyah Willcox herself.
Wilcox does this with sensitivity, analytic zeal and subtle emotional force." [5] Many of his songs analyze the dynamics of relationships in epigrammatic verses that are at once earnest and gently humorous. While many of Mr. Wilcox's songs have light blues inflections, occasionally they also look back in spirit to Tin Pan Alley.
The discography of English musician Toyah Willcox includes releases as part of the band Toyah and as a solo artist, for which she has carried on releasing music credited as Toyah. It also includes Willcox's one-off collaborations with other artists.
It should only contain pages that are Toyah Willcox songs or lists of Toyah Willcox songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Toyah Willcox songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
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Willcox has described "Barefoot on Mars" as "a song about invisible love and addressing something from our past that needs communicating and contact with" and explained that it refers to the complicated relationship with her mother and her passing. [11] "Summer of Love" is an anti-war protest song referring to the original 1967 Summer of Love ...