Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Alive" is a ballad recorded by the Bee Gees for their album To Whom It May Concern. It was the second and last single from the album released on 10 November 1972 worldwide. The song was credited to Barry and Maurice Gibb and produced by the Gibbs and their manager Robert Stigwood. [1]
The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" by Roberta Flack was the number one song of 1972. Al Green had three songs on the Year-End Hot 100, the most of any artist in 1972. This is a list of Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 1972. [1] The Top 100, as revealed in the year-end edition of Billboard dated December 30, 1972, is based on Hot 100 ...
Mike Berry and Bob Saker covered the song on their album Drift Away which was produced and played on by Maurice Gibb. [5]Maurice Gibb re-recorded "On Time" in 1983 for the film A Breed Apart and its accompanying soundtrack, but it was the 1972 Bee Gees recording that was used in the film, and the 1983 version sounds like a home demo with guitars and drum track.
The 2001 CD re-issue by Rhino has eight additional tracks including several from the 1974 album The Best of Bread, Volume 2, along with the November 1976 single Lost Without Your Love. In 2015 Audio Fidelity released the 12 song album on the Super Audio CD format.
The album was released in November 1972. Stephen Holden's contemporary review in Rolling Stone commented that he felt the Bee Gees occupied "a very limited territory of pop music", dealing mainly in ballads of "momentary pathos", and that the album was "headphone mood music that makes no demands beyond a superficial emotional surrender to its perfumed atmosphere of pink frosting and glitter ...
Christmas Album: 1964 "Full Sail" Carl Wilson Geoffrey Cushing-Murray 1978 L.A. (Light Album) 1979 "Fun, Fun, Fun" † Brian Wilson Mike Love 1964 Shut Down Volume 2: 1964 "Funky Pretty" Brian Wilson Mike Love Jack Rieley 1972 Holland: 1973 "Game of Love" Clint Ballard Jr. # 1967 1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow ‡ 2017 "Games Two Can Play" Brian ...
Brothers Chris and Rich Robinson, who reformed the Black Crowes in 2019, thought an album of cover songs would be a good step toward releasing an album of new material. Rolling Stone notes: "As the Robinson brothers attempt to rebuild their creative partnership, the sessions were like 'good baby steps' for them, Chris says, 'a less-pressure ...
The audio rights of the film will be retained by the production company itself; initially Sony Music India planned to acquire the rights for the album which did not happen, citing Sun Pictures' decision on not tying-up with music labels. [34] The music album of Beast, along with Sun Pictures' upcoming film productions, will be released on the ...