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Duets is a compilation of duets by the country music artist Emmylou Harris in partnership with other well-known country and rock artists. Most of the twelve tracks on the album originally appeared as singles or on albums released by her singing partners.
"Love Hurts" is a song written and composed by the American songwriter Boudleaux Bryant. First recorded by the Everly Brothers in July 1960, the song is most well known in two hit versions by UK artists; by Scottish hard rock band Nazareth in 1974 and by English singer-songwriter Jim Capaldi in 1975.
Love Hurts is the twentieth studio album by American singer and actress Cher, released on June 18, 1991, [1] by Geffen Records. The album was her final studio album with the record company after a 4-year recording contract.
Manny Charlton, the founding guitarist of Nazareth who played on the Scottish rock band’s best-known records, including “Love Hurts”, its LP Hair of the Dog, and also produced early Guns N ...
Hair of The Dog was Nazareth's first big hit album (aside from the minor success of Razamanaz), including classics such as the title track, a version of The Everly Brothers' "Love Hurts" (on the US version, but not the Canadian/European, it replaced the original "Guilty"), "Beggars Day" and "Please Don't Judas Me".
BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert — — 1998 Live at the Beeb — — 2001 Back to the Trenches — — 2002 Homecoming — — 2002 Alive & Kicking — — 2004 The River Sessions Live 1981 — — 2007 Live in Brazil — — "—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory.
Homecoming is the second official live album by the Scottish hard rock band Nazareth, released in 2002. Recorded in Glasgow, Scotland in 2001, it may be regarded as the soundtrack to the DVD of the same name, with stage talk edited to allow the tracks to fit onto a single CD. The CD tray insert states "The Greatest Hits Live In Glasgow".
BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert is a live album by the Scottish hard rock band Nazareth, recorded for broadcast by the BBC at the Paris Theatre 8 June 1972 (wrongly listed as 5 June on CD) and 17 May 1973