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Music video "Heritage" on YouTube " Heritage " is a song by American band Earth, Wind & Fire featuring Suns of Light (as the Boys ), released in February 1990 by Columbia Records [ 1 ] as the first single from their fifteenth studio album .
The original Beatles version was issued in several countries as a single from the Rock 'n' Roll Music compilation album in 1976, six years after the Beatles disbanded, and reached number one in Canada. Another cover version by Earth, Wind & Fire from the Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band film soundtrack peaked at number nine in the US in ...
Earth, Wind & Fire performing at the opening ceremony of the 2008 U.S. Open August 25, 2008. Interpretations: Celebrating the Music of Earth, Wind & Fire, an album featuring cover versions of EWF's material, was released in March 2007 on Stax Records.
Alex Henderson of AllMusic called Gratitude "uplifting." [4] Record World said that "With vocal parlays reminiscent of early Sly & the Family Stone and a horn section that is as tight as Chicago's, the group should soon be back on top.'" [5] Cliff White of NME exclaimed "Particularly good is a hybrid from Curtis Mayfield's Impressions and The Blackbyrds called "Sing A Song".
"Let Me Talk" is a song by American band Earth, Wind & Fire, released in August 1980 by ARC/Columbia Records [1] as the first single from their tenth album, Faces (1980). It reached No. 8 on the US Billboard Hot R&B Singles chart and No. 29 on the UK Pop Singles chart.
R&B artist Ledisi covered Devotion on the 2007 tribute album Interpretations: Celebrating the Music of Earth, Wind & Fire. [10] "Devotion" was sampled by Yo-Yo featuring Ice Cube on the track "You Can't Play with My Yo-Yo" from her 1991 album Make Way for the Motherlode. In 1996, rap group Mo Thugs sampled the song in their single “Thug ...
The single's B-side is "Rock That". Both songs appear on Earth, Wind & Fire's 1979 album I Am. [1] The song dates back to when David Foster was working on an album for Motown Records singer Jaye P. Morgan. The album was released in Japan and never took off in the United States. Foster later went to Motown to let the executives hear some of the ...
"Magnetic" is from Earth, Wind & Fire's 1983 studio album Electric Universe. The single's B-side is "The Speed of Love", a track from the album Powerlight, released earlier that year. [1] During December 1983, "Magnetic"'s accompanying music video was issued by Columbia.