Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"The Air That I Breathe" was a hit for the Hollies in early 1974, reaching number two in the UK Singles Chart.In mid-1974, it reached number six in the United States on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and number three on the Adult Contemporary chart. [6]
The Air That I Breathe – The Very Best of The Hollies: Released: 22 March 1993; Origin: UK; Label: EMI (EMTV/CDEMTV 74) Format: stereo LP/CD; 15 — — The Hollies at Abbey Road 1963–1966: Released: 13 October 1997; Origin: UK; Label: EMI (CDABBEY 103) Format: CD — — — The Hollies at Abbey Road 1966–1970: Released: February 1998 ...
Radiohead had not planned to release "Creep", and recorded it at the suggestion of the producers, Sean Slade and Paul Q. Kolderie, while they were working on other songs. They took elements from the 1972 song "The Air That I Breathe" by Albert Hammond and Mike Hazlewood. Following legal action, Hammond and Hazlewood were credited as co-writers.
Hollies is the 14th UK studio album by the English pop rock group the Hollies, released in 1974, marking the return of Allan Clarke after he had left for a solo career. It features the band's cover of Albert Hammond 's ballad " The Air That I Breathe ," a major worldwide hit that year.
Clarke, Hicks & Nash Years: The Complete Hollies April 1963 – October 1968 is a 6-CD box set released in the United Kingdom by EMI Records in 2011. As the title suggests, it encompasses, in chronological order by recording date, almost every song The Hollies have released to date that was recorded between April 1963 and October 1968, when Graham Nash left the band. [2]
The Air That I Breathe is the 45th studio album by British pop singer Cliff Richard, released on 30 October 2020. The album entered the UK Albums Chart at number 3, which has seen Richard become the first artist to make the top five of the albums chart for eight consecutive decades.
A Crazy Steal is a eighteenth studio album by English rock and pop band the Hollies, released on 1 March 1978. [2] It includes their version of Emmylou Harris' "Boulder to Birmingham", which had been released two years prior, reaching number 10 in the charts in New Zealand.
For Certain Because is the fifth UK album by the Hollies and their second released in 1966. [4] [5] It was the first Hollies album in which all the songs were written by members Allan Clarke, Graham Nash, and Tony Hicks, and the first on which they did not use the songwriting pseudonym "L. Ransford" (or just "Ransford").