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The Very Best of Winger is a compilation album of material from the American rock band Winger, released by the label Atlantic Records and the company Rhino Entertainment in October 2001. [ 1 ] Most of the songs on the album were collected from the first three Winger studio albums: Winger (1988), In the Heart of the Young (1990) and Pull (1993).
Winger is an American rock band formed in New York City, New York in 1987. Winger gained popularity during the late 1980s and early 1990s with two platinum albums , Winger and In the Heart of the Young , along with charting singles " Seventeen ", " Headed for a Heartbreak " and " Miles Away ".
Winger: 1989 "Seventeen" 26 19 — "Headed for a Heartbreak" 19 8 — "Hungry" 85 34 — 1990 "Can't Get Enuff" 42 6 — In the Heart of the Young "Miles Away" 12 14 56 1991 "Easy Come Easy Go" 41 20 — 1993 "Down Incognito" — 15 — Pull "—" denotes releases that did not chart
Winger is the debut studio album by American rock band Winger. ... A number of radio and video hits were extracted from the album, ...
In the Heart of the Young (also known as Winger II) is the second studio album by the American rock band Winger. It was released by Atlantic Records in 1990. Beau Hill produced the album. Although coming out at the decline of the glam metal scene in the U.S., the release was a commercial success, prompting additional touring by the group.
So says Kip Winger of his eponymous band behind hits like the now-politically-incorrect “Seventeen” and perhaps too-prophetically-titled “Headed for a Heartbreak,” as he looks back on his ...
Written by frontman Kip Winger and guitarist Reb Beach, "Can't Get Enuff" was the first single from the band's second album, debuting on the U.S. charts in July 1990. [2] The song's music video, directed by Michael Bay , [ 3 ] received heavy rotation at MTV and the up-tempo rocker was Winger's most successful track at rock radio, where it ...
"Seventeen" is a single by American rock band Winger from their debut album Winger. Released in 1989, the song charted at No. 26 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song was named the 87th best hard rock song of all time by VH1. [4] The B-side for this single was the album cut "Poison Angel".