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Sting " Until... " is a waltz/ballad song written and performed by Sting , from the 2001 Academy Award -nominated and Golden Globe -winning film Kate & Leopold . [ 1 ] The song won the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song and was nominated for the Academy Award in the same category.
Electric Dirt is the final studio album from American musician Levon Helm, released in 2009. It is the follow-up to his Grammy-winning 2007 album Dirt Farmer. In Uncut ' s list of the 150 best albums between 2000 through 2009, Electric Dirt was listed 80th. It won the first ever Grammy Award for Best Americana Album, an inaugural category in ...
By this stage in the group's career, they had become known as a disco act due to successful singles such as "Heaven Must Be Missing an Angel", "Whodunit" and "More Than a Woman." However, Madam Butterfly is noted for its lack of anything approaching disco material, and, as such, is considered to be more akin in style to the group's 1973-'75 ...
Daniel Ivan Hicks (December 9, 1941 – February 6, 2016) was an American singer-songwriter and musician, and the leader of Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks.His idiosyncratic style combined elements of cowboy folk, jazz, country, swing, bluegrass, pop, and gypsy music.
"Best Thing I Never Had" is a song recorded by American singer and songwriter Beyoncé for her fourth studio album, 4 (2011). It was released by Columbia Records on June 1, 2011, as the second single from the album.
The album had two chart running singles. "Lady Heroin" was originally going to be on Sam Sneed 's unreleased album Street Scholars . This is both the second to last Death Row Soundtrack Album and second to last Death Row album to be distributed by Interscope, as later in the year they would drop Death Row from their label.
The album was recorded in New York and largely produced by Jens Gad.Most of the songs were co-written by his younger brother, Toby Gad.As opposed to the preceding album, The Art of Love, which was created during a difficult time in Sandra's life, material on Back to Life has more upbeat and optimistic feel. [1]
The song was originally recorded by Stevie Wonder in 1967, but his version was not released as a single and did not appear on an album until 1977's anthology Looking Back. The best-known version of this song is the 1973 release by Aretha Franklin , who had a million-selling top 10 hit on Billboard charts.