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Songs from the 1988 recording session including "Ride the Whip" and "Only Young Once" made it to the new album. Trixter was released in May 1990 with the song "Line of Fire" as the single for rock radio. The song slowly climbed the charts, reaching No.1 on Z-Rocks Top 100 by July 1990.
Trixter is the debut album of the band Trixter. It attained gold status, reaching No. 28 on the Billboard 200 chart. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The album spawned three minor hit singles on the Billboard Hot 100 : "Give It to Me Good" at No. 65, "Surrender" at No. 72, and " One in a Million " at No. 75.
"One in a Million is a song by American rock band Trixter. Written by guitarist Steve Brown with Bill and Jim Wray, the song was released as the second single from the band's self-titled debut . While not as successful as previous single "Give It to Me Good", "One in a Million" was still a modest success, peaking at #75 and #33 on the Billboard ...
Bill Wray made an appearance on the Billboard Hot 100 with the song "Pinball, That's All" in 1979, peaking at No. 96. [1] [2] Bill Wray has written the songs "Fool for Your Love" and "So Close" for Diana Ross. Wray and his brother Jim wrote most of the hits ("One in a Million", "Surrender") on Trixter's debut album.
The album was produced by James Barton. [6] Trixter wrote and demoed eight of the songs while touring in support of their debut. [7] The band hoped to move away from the pop metal of Trixter by titling the album Hear! and opting to forgo a band cover photo; Trixter considered the music to be rock 'n' roll.
The top of the year is always slow in the music business—those few weeks between the holidays and the start of awards season are generally reserved for emerging acts and album or tour ...
THE COUNTDOWN: From Charli XCX’s neon-splattered club remix with Lorde to The Cure’s moment of bleary-eyed brilliance 16 years in the making, here are the songs that defined 2024, chosen by ...
The song, recognized as "the best-selling single of all time", was released before the pop/rock singles-chart era and "was listed as the world's best-selling single in the first-ever Guinness Book of Records (published in 1955) and—remarkably—still retains the title more than 50 years later".