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"Dim All the Lights" is a song by American recording artist Donna Summer released as the third single from her 1979 album Bad Girls. It debuted at number 70 on August 25, 1979, and peaked that year at number two on November 10 and November 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 . [ 1 ]
It contained the US Billboard Hot 100 number-one hits "Hot Stuff" and "Bad Girls", and the number-two hit "Dim All the Lights". Summer became the first female artist to have two songs in the top three of the Billboard Hot 100 when during the week of June 30, 1979, "Hot Stuff" fell to number two and "Bad Girls" rose to number three.
Live And More Encore is a live album released by Donna Summer in 1999, an edited version of a televised concert of the same name.Released on Sony Music's sublabel Epic, it featured a live concert which had been filmed especially for the VH-1 channel, and also two new dance tracks, including a re-working of "Time To Say Goodbye", a semi-classical song previously made popular by Andrea Bocelli ...
The song "On The Radio" was nominated for "Best Pop Vocal Female" at the Grammy Awards. In some territories, such as France, the compilation was also marketed (for a limited time) as two separate discs, Greatest Hits Volume 1 and Greatest Hits Volume 2, with the same track listing as each individual disc in the original double LP. Both sleeves ...
Critic score: 40% Synopsis: In "Best.Christmas. Ever!" Charlotte (Heather Graham) sets out to prove that her old college friend Jackie (Brandy Norwood) doesn't actually have the perfect life she ...
Unlike 1993's The Donna Summer Anthology, which contains the majority of the songs in their original longer forms, Endless Summer generally includes single versions of the songs. However, the version sold in the United Kingdom uses the album version of the track " I Don't Wanna Get Hurt ", (from Another Place and Time ), not the more club ...
One of the stockings says "Mom" at the top, while two others have the names of Clarkson's two kids — daughter River, 10, and son Remy, 8 — on them. The fourth stocking simple reads "Nope."
The song’s original title was simply “Enough is Enough,” which didn’t fit the theme of Streisand’s Wet album, in which every song had something to do with water. So the songwriters changed the title and added the introduction: “It’s raining, it’s pouring, my love life is boring me to tears.” [ 3 ]