Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The song was covered by The Dynamics on their 2011 album 180,000 Miles and Counting. The song was covered by Tackhead on their 2014 album of the same name, For the Love of Money. The song was covered by Nektar on their 2012 album "A Spoonful of Time." The song was used as part of a medley on the soundtrack album to the musical MJ.
His performance on "For the Love of Money" by The O'Jays helped move the song to No. 9 on the pop chart and No. 3 on the R&B chart in 1974. [2] Jackson is a student of Jerry Fisher, Lawrence Lucie, and Pat Martino. He has performed live in more than 30 countries and has recorded in more than 3000 sessions on more than 500 albums. [4]
The book A Change is Gonna Come: Music, Race and the Soul of America notes that unlike the seminal work by Haley, "Ship Ahoy" is a hopeless, ominous song that offers "no sense that things are going to work out fine." [9] In its 1974 review of the album, The New York Times characterized the song as "dark and occasionally spine-chilling."
It is part of Sony's Playlist album series, which covers 1972 through to 1978, when the O'Jays (and Gamble & Huff) were at the peak of the Charts. Every song on the album has placed somewhere within the Top 20 of the R&B chart , and many of them went to the top of the chart including " Back Stabbers ," " Love Train ," "For the Love of Money ...
The extensive list of musical artists, or their representatives, who have strenuously objected to their songs being played at Trump events during his 2016, 2020 and 2024 campaigns includes dozens ...
The O'Jays are an American R&B group from Canton, Ohio, formed in summer 1958 and originally consisting of Eddie Levert, Walter Lee Williams, William Powell, Bobby Massey, and Bill Isles. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The O'Jays made their first chart appearance with the minor hit "Lonely Drifter" in 1963, but reached their greatest level of success once the ...
Topics about The O'Jays songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories This category contains songs by The O'Jays . See also: Category:The O'Jays albums
Dietary fructose may promote tumor growth, according to research in animal models of melanoma, breast cancer, and cervical cancer.