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A music video was created for "That Was Yesterday," directed by Jim Yukich. [17] As with "I Want to Know What Love Is", the music video for "That Was Yesterday" is based on a live performance of the song. [18] The video was filmed at the Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center in Birmingham, Alabama.
Foreigner in San Francisco, 2009 The discography of Foreigner , a British - American rock band, consists of 9 studio albums , 7 live albums , 20 compilation albums , and 47 singles . The band was formed in New York City in 1976 by veteran English musicians Mick Jones and Ian McDonald , and American vocalist Lou Gramm .
Louis Andrew Grammatico (born May 2, 1950), known professionally as Lou Gramm, is an American singer and songwriter.He is best known as co-founder and lead vocalist of the rock band Foreigner from 1976 to 1990 and again from 1992 to 2003, during which time the band had numerous successful albums and singles.
Foreigner's next album, Agent Provocateur, co-produced by Alex Sadkin, was released in December 1984 and, in 1985, gave them their first and only No. 1 hit song in the US and several other countries (except for Canada, where "Urgent" had reached No. 1) when "I Want to Know What Love Is", a ballad backed by Jennifer Holliday and the New Jersey ...
By the time of Agent Provocateur, Foreigner was frequently savaged by the contemporary rock music press. A review in Creem read: "On this, their latest excursion into the gaping jaws of pulverizing mediocrity, our boys continue to wrestle with an all-too-turgid identity crisis — they still can't decide whether it's stupider to aspire to poor man's Led Zep status or settle for being a ...
Disc one; No. Title Writer(s) Original album Length; 1. "Feels Like the First Time" Jones: Foreigner, 1977: 3:52: 2. "Long, Long Way From Home" Jones, Gramm, Ian ...
That Was Yesterday may refer to: "That Was Yesterday" (Donna Fargo song) "That Was Yesterday" (Foreigner song) This page was last edited on 30 ...
Ian McDonald performing with Foreigner in 1979. McDonald moved to New York City in the mid-1970s. [14] In 1976, he co-formed the band Foreigner with Mick Jones, Lou Gramm, Dennis Elliott, Al Greenwood and Ed Gagliardi, with Gagliardi replaced by Rick Wills in 1979. With Foreigner, McDonald played guitar as well as his woodwinds and keyboards. [15]