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The discography of Savage Garden, an Australian duo made up of singer Darren Hayes and producer Daniel Jones, contains two studio albums, three compilation album, thirteen singles and four video albums.
Savage Garden won a record of ten ARIA Awards in September 1997: Best Pop Release and Song of the Year for "To the Moon and Back" and Single of the Year and Highest Selling Single for "Truly Madly Deeply", Best Independent Release, Breakthrough Artist – Album, Album of the Year and Best Group for Savage Garden, Producer of the Year and ...
It should only contain pages that are Savage Garden songs or lists of Savage Garden songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Savage Garden songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The album was released worldwide on 28 November 2005, within the exception of the United States, where it was not available until 4 February 2006.The album was released to commemorate Savage Garden's tenth year in the music industry, and their overwhelming success, despite only releasing two albums—Savage Garden and Affirmation.
"Truly Madly Deeply" is a song by Australian pop duo Savage Garden, released in March 1997 as the third single from their self-titled debut album (1997) by Roadshow and Warner Music. It won the 1997 ARIA Music Award for both Single of the Year and Highest Selling Single and was nominated for Song of the Year. [ 1 ]
Darren Stanley Hayes (born 8 May 1972) [2] is an Australian singer, songwriter, music producer and composer. [3] He was the frontman and singer of the pop duo Savage Garden until their disbandment. Their 1997 album Savage Garden peaked at number 1 in Australia
The song was a success on the US Billboard Hot 100, where it spent four weeks at the top, becoming Savage Garden's third and final top-10 hit. It was the last song by an Australian artist to reach the top of the Billboard Hot 100 for over 12 years, until Gotye peaked at number one with his single " Somebody That I Used to Know " in 2012.
The exception was 'You Can Still Be Free', a much older song that dated back to at least 1995 - a demo recording appeared on their 1995 demo tape, then titled 'Free'. The track was written in tribute to a friend of the band who died by suicide some years previously, and was revisited after said friends' family explained they loved the song and ...