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"Can't Shake the Feeling" is a pop-dance song written by Stock Aitken Waterman for British boy band Big Fun. It was the second single from their 1990 debut studio album A Pocketful of Dreams on which it is the third track.
Singles released from the album include "Blame It on the Boogie", a cover version of The Jacksons' 1978 hit, "Can't Shake the Feeling", and "Handful of Promises". "I Feel the Earth Move" was intended to be their first single (and promo copies were circulated), but its release was cancelled in favour of "Blame It on the Boogie".
A Pocketful of Dreams is the debut album by English boy band Big Fun.It was released in 1990 and reached the top 10 of the UK Albums Chart, [1] peaking at No. 7.. The album includes their UK top 40 hit singles "Blame It on the Boogie" (a cover of the Jacksons' 1978 hit), "Can't Shake the Feeling" and "Handful of Promises".
The hit single, "Can't Shake the Feeling" got to no. 43 on the Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart, [8] [9] no. 37 on the Cash Box Top 100 Black Contemporary singles chart, [10] [11] no. 47 on the Record World Black Oriented Singles chart, [12] [13] and no. 137 on the Record World Singles 101 - 150 chart.
Date Artist Title Written by Produced by UK Chart US Chart AUS Chart Album 03 Mar 1986 The Three Degrees "This is the House" Stock, Aitken, Waterman
The Beck Family was a musical family group from Philadelphia. With their music in the disco-funk genre, they had success with their hit single, "Can't Shake the Feeling" which charted nationally in 1979, the peak of the disco era.
It got a good review and the picks were, "Can't Shake the Feeling", Dancin' on the Ceiling" and "Falling in Love Again". with pop crossover potential, the expectations were r&b and disco airplay. [2] "Can't Shake the Feeling" was a Record World Single Pick for the week ending March 17. The review was positive with the magazine calling it a ...
Can't Shake This Feeling is a 1981 studio album by American soul music vocal group the Spinners, released on Atlantic Records. It continued a pattern of critical and commercial decline, with the band barely cracking the Billboard 200 and receiving lukewarm reviews.