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"The Age of Love" is a 1990 self-titled track by Italian-Belgian duo Age of Love. It is notable as an early popular example of trance music. [3]Released as a single in 1990 on the Belgian label DiKi Records, [4] it was written by Bruno Sanchioni and Giuseppe Chierchia, and produced by Sanchioni and Roger Samyn, the owner of DiKi Records.
"Space Age Love Song" is a 1982 single released by the British band A Flock of Seagulls. It was their fourth single. Lead guitarist Paul Reynolds remarked on their 1984 video album Through the Looking Glass that, as the band could not come up with a title for the track, he suggested "Space Age Love Song" because he thought it sounded like a space age love song.
The Age of Love, a 2014 documentary film about seniors looking for love; Age of Love, a 2007 reality television show on NBC; Age of Love, a 1997 studio album by Scooter "The Age of Love" (Age of Love song), 1990, or the Italian-Belgian duo who wrote and is mostly known for that song "The Age of Love" (Scooter song), 1997
Under the name Age of Love, he and producer Bruno Sanchioni released an eponymous track in 1990, which featured vocals by French dancer Valérie Honoré. [7] The vocal is often misattributed to Dutch supermodel Karen Mulder. [8] Starting from the late 1980s, he also worked as a television and radio presenter and writer. [4]
In 2004, the song was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. [9] The lyrics of this song were based on the astrological belief that the world would soon be entering the "Age of Aquarius", an age of love, light, and humanity, unlike the current "Age of Pisces". The circumstances for the change are given as: "When the moon is in the seventh house ...
Let’s be honest: Love songs always hit right in the feels. A ballad can transform from a regular song into the soundtrack of your relationship—whether you’re celebrating your 25th ...
Producer Howard Benson used to be an aerospace engineer. He was also in a band. “We were probably like the worst band in L.A.,” he tells me from his studio in Los Angeles. “But I learned a ...
"Age Ain't Nothing but a Number" was described by The Boombox as a "soulful ballad" with Aaliyah "crooning of longing for an older lover". [1] Tonya Pendleton from The Washington Post, said it was a "seductive entreaty to an older lover to forget their age difference and allow their relationship to ripen". [2]