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"Cool the Engines" is a song written by Tom Scholz, Brad Delp and Fran Sheehan that was originally released on Boston's 1986 album Third Stage.In the US it was also released as a 12" promotional single backed with another song from Third Stage, "The Launch," and as the B-side to the third commercially released single from the album, "Can'tcha Say (You Believe in Me)/Still in Love."
Greatest Hits is a compilation album by American rock band Boston. Released on June 3, 1997, the album features songs originally released on both the Epic and MCA record labels, as well as three previously unreleased recordings ("Tell Me", "Higher Power" and "The Star-Spangled Banner").
Greatest Hits: 1997 [7] "Stare Out Your Window" Anton Cosmo: Corporate America: 2002 [2] "Surrender to Me" Tom Scholz David Sikes Bobby Laquidara Walk On: 1994 [6] "Te Quiero Mia" Tom Scholz Life, Love & Hope (LP bonus track) 2013 [8] "Tell Me" Tom Scholz Greatest Hits: 1997 [7] "To Be a Man" Tom Scholz Third Stage: 1986 [1] "Turn It Off" Anton ...
A compilation album titled Greatest Hits was released in 1997 and went platinum twice. [1] [2] [5] [6] Boston's fifth studio album, Corporate America, was released in 2002 by Artemis Records. [2] Overall, the band have sold over 31 million albums in the US. [1] Boston's sixth studio album, Life, Love & Hope was released in December 2013. A ...
Boston is an American rock band formed in Boston, Massachusetts in 1975. The band's core members include multi-instrumentalist, founder and leader Tom Scholz, who played the majority of instruments on the band's 1976 self-titled debut album, and former lead vocalist Brad Delp, among a number of other musicians who varied from album to album.
Paul Elliott of TeamRock.com rated it Boston's 8th greatest song. [6] Elliott said that this song along with "Still in Love" are "two great AOR songs in one." [14] Philip Booth of the Lakeland Ledger praises the song's "a cappella vocal opening." [15] Tom Alesia of The Wisconsin State Journal regards the song's title as Boston's worst. [16]
Following Goudreau's and Hashian's departure, Sheehan was fired from the band midway through the sessions for Boston's Third Stage album in the early '80s. He received a songwriting credit for "Cool the Engines," however. After leaving Boston, Sheehan (along with two other ex-band members) sued Tom Scholz, before settling out of court. [2]
Third Stage is the third studio album by the American rock band Boston, released on September 24, 1986, on MCA Records, as the band's first album on the label. [5] It was recorded at Boston co-founder Tom Scholz's Hideaway Studio over a long, strained, six-year period "between floods and power failures". [6]