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The album spent 92 weeks on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, becoming the longest-charting album by a female artist on the chart and 16 weeks on the Billboard 200. The album was released in the UK as Sweet Love: The Very Best of Anita Baker, with a slightly different track listing and running order.
Giving You the Best That I Got is the third album by American R&B/soul singer Anita Baker, released in 1988. It was Baker's first and only #1 album in the US, her second #1 R&B Album , and was certified 3× platinum in 1989 by the RIAA .
American singer-songwriter Anita Baker has released six studio albums, one compilation & live album, and twenty-four singles. Referred as the "Queen of Romantic Quiet-Storm R&B/Soul", [ 1 ] she is considered to be one of the most successful and influential R&B artists of the 1980s. [ 2 ]
"Giving You the Best That I Got" is a 1988 song by American R&B recording artist Anita Baker. The music video was filmed inside the 109th Field Artillery in Kingston, Pennsylvania. The song appears on Baker's album of the same name, which was released in the fall of that year. The song was written by Baker, Skip Scarborough and Randy Holland.
It should only contain pages that are Anita Baker songs or lists of Anita Baker songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Anita Baker songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Anita Baker was born on January 26, 1958, in Toledo, Ohio.When she was two, her mother abandoned her and Baker was raised by a foster family in Detroit, Michigan. [9] When Baker was 12, her foster parents died and her foster sister raised her afterwards. [9]
Pages in category "Songs written by Anita Baker" ... Giving You the Best That I Got (song) H. ... Sweet Love (Anita Baker song) T. Talk to Me (Anita Baker song) Y.
"Sweet Love" is a song by American R&B singer and songwriter Anita Baker from her second studio album, Rapture (1986). It was written by Anita Baker, Louis A. Johnson, and Gary Bias, and produced by Michael J. Powell. It was released in May 1986 as the album's first single.