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The Cover Girls are a New York City based American freestyle music girl group whose original line-up consisted of Louise "Angel" (Sabater) Mercado, Caroline Jackson, and Sunshine Wright. Formed in 1986, The Cover Girls peaked at #44 on the Billboard Hot 100 with their debut single " Show Me ", taken from their debut studio album of the same name.
The Cover Girls became among the first in a wave of freestyle musical artists to enjoy chart hits in the late 1980s; other associated acts include Exposé, Stevie B and Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam. In 2000, former lead singer of the Cover Girls Angel Clivillés released an updated version of "Show Me" that was remixed and produced by DJ Tony Moran .
We Can't Go Wrong is the second album from the New York-based R&B–dance trio The Cover Girls.Although the album only made it to #108 on the Billboard album chart, by the end of 1990 it had been certified platinum and become the group's biggest-selling album.
Show Me is the debut album by the R&B–dance trio the Cover Girls released on independent label Fever Records. The album would produce the hit title track, "Show Me", as well as the Top 40 singles "Because of You" and "Promise Me". This would be the only album to feature original member Sunshine Wright, who would depart the group after the ...
"Wishing on a Star" is a cover of the song made famous by Rose Royce. [5] [6] The album was recorded with new vocalist Michelle Valentine along with previous members Caroline Jackson and Evelyn Escalera. In 1990 Evelyn Escalera joined Carline Jackson and Margo Urban as the lead singer of the Cover Girls.
"Because of You" is a song by the American freestyle girl group the Cover Girls. Released as a 12" single and 7" single on September 29, 1987, "Because of You" reached No. 27 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in February 1988. [1]
Cover Girl is a fictional character from the G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero toyline, comic books and animated series. She is a tank jockey for the G.I. Joe Team , specializing in the Wolverine missile tank, and debuted in 1983 on the same team.
Writer Marcia Hilmes contrasted the film negatively with Charlie's Angels, arguing that in Angels the lead characters were always first and foremost detectives, with any sexual objectification as an aid to their detective work, whereas in Cover Girls the leads seemed to place as much emphasis on their modelling as their crime fighting. [6]