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Logan would go on to write the winner song of the 1992 contest, "Why Me?" performed by Linda Martin. "Hold Me Now" is regarded as one of the high points of the contest history, it was one of fourteen songs chosen by Eurovision fans and a European Broadcasting Union (EBU) reference group, from among the 992 songs that had ever participated in the contest, to participate in the fiftieth ...
The song is composed in the key of D major, with a time signature set in common time, and moves at a moderate tempo of 108 beats per minute. [13] While most of the group's previous songs have a dance-oriented sound, "Hold Me Now" has a mainstream piano-based melody but keeps the prominent bass line and Currie's Latin percussion of earlier ...
Into the Gap is the fourth studio album by British pop group Thompson Twins, released on 17 February 1984 by Arista Records. [3] The album was recorded during 1983 at Compass Point Studios, in Nassau, Bahamas, and was produced by Alex Sadkin who had produced the band's previous studio album, Quick Step & Side Kick (1983).
Chicago's 1982 song "Hard to Say I'm Sorry" is sometimes referred to as "Hold Me Now" after the first line of the chorus Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Hold Me Now .
Hold Me Now is a studio album by Australian-born Irish singer and composer Johnny Logan. The album includes his 1987 Eurovision Song Contest winning song Hold Me Now and a new version of his 1980 Eurovision winning song What's Another Year ? .
[18] [19] Wilson also recorded a version of the Thompson Twins song "Hold Me Now" in 2015; it was featured in the pilot episode of the series Scream Queens. [20] In 2016 the video for Wilson's song "El Barrio" was released; it featured Rafael Reyes, also known as Leafar Seyer, as her love interest. [21] [4]
"Hold Me" is a song by Australian musical duo Savage Garden, released as the sixth overall single from their second and final studio album, Affirmation. Released in the United Kingdom in November 2000 and in Australia in January 2001, the single reached number 54 in Australia and became a top-20 hit in New Zealand and the United Kingdom.
The Pendergrass and Houston version appears on Pendergrass's eighth studio album Love Language (1984) and Houston's self-titled debut album (1985). It was written by Linda Creed and Michael Masser and production overseen by Masser. "Hold Me" was the first single release of Houston's career.