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The music video for "Pa Pa Ya!!", filmed during a live performance at Yokohama Arena, [11] was released on July 1, 2019. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] Showcasing a debut performance of the song during the concert Babymetal Awakens: The Sun Also Rises on June 29, 2019, [ 14 ] the live performance and music video featured a guest appearance by F. Hero, who had ...
The Phenomenon 1968–1998 (a.k.a. Forever and Ever – 40 Greatest Hits) by Demis Roussos (1998) Forever and Ever – Definitive Collection by Demis Roussos (2002) Collected by Demis Roussos (2015) The Best of Roxy Music by Roxy Music (2001) Greatest Hits by Roxy Music (1977) Greatest Hits by Run-D.M.C. (2002)
Most of the songs listed here are remixes. This compilation's songs have more refined and re-recorded tracks, less noise in the background, and a lot of reverberation in the background. ^† These songs include a harder bass drum line and considerably more reverberation than the original version. "Top of the World" is mixed with an alternate ...
List of live albums, with selected details Title Album details Historic Performances at the Monterey International Pop Festival: Released: 1970; Label: Dunhill (DSX 50100) Greatest Hits: Live in 1982: Released: 1989; Label: Success (2170CD) Live in Concert: Released: 1991; Label: PolyTel Elite (848 697-2) California Dreamin' Released: 1997
Greatest Hits is a greatest hits album by American singer-songwriter Tracy Chapman, released on November 20, 2015, by Elektra and Rhino. It is the second compilation of her career, following Collection from 2001, and the first available in the United States. All tracks were chosen by Chapman herself. [1] The collection received positive reviews.
Greatest Hits, Etc. is the first greatest hits album by American singer-songwriter Paul Simon, released in November 1977 by Columbia Records. It was his first compilation, spanning the first six years of his solo career.
Turner re-recorded some of her hits for the soundtrack album as well as three new songs. The weary, bittersweet “I Don’t Wanna Fight,” co-written by ‘60s pop star Lulu, became Turner’s ...
It is part of Sony's Playlist album series, which covers 1972 through to 1978, when the O'Jays (and Gamble & Huff) were at the peak of the Charts. Every song on the album has placed somewhere within the Top 20 of the R&B chart , and many of them went to the top of the chart including " Back Stabbers ," " Love Train ," "For the Love of Money ...