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Eurythmics reunited in 1999 and released their eighth and final studio album, Peace, which peaked at number four on the UK chart. [1] A second greatest hits album, Ultimate Collection, was released in 2005, reaching the UK Top 5 and has been certified triple platinum. Overall, the duo have sold over 75 million records worldwide. [8]
"Winter Wonderland" is a song written in 1934 by Felix Bernard and lyricist Richard Bernhard Smith. Due to its seasonal theme, it is often regarded as a Christmas song in the Northern Hemisphere . Since its original recording by Richard Himber , it has been covered by over 200 different artists.
As of November 2014, A Very Special Christmas is the 19th best-selling Christmas/holiday album in the United States during the SoundScan era of music sales tracking (March 1991 – present), having sold 2,520,000 copies according to SoundScan. [6]
On 7 November 2005, Eurythmics released Ultimate Collection, a remastered greatest hits package with two new songs. One of them, " I've Got a Life ", was released as a single and reached No. 14 on the UK Singles Chart [ 12 ] as well as spending three consecutive weeks at No. 1 on Billboard's Hot Dance Music/Club Play in the US.
It should only contain pages that are Eurythmics songs or lists of Eurythmics songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Eurythmics songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
According to Wikipedia, Klum recorded "Wonderland" in 2006 for a commercial for German retailer Douglas. Not much else is known about the cute, twinkling ditty, but we think that kind of adds to ...
Ultimate Collection is the second greatest hits album by British pop duo Eurythmics, released on 7 November 2005 by RCA Records.It marked a return for the duo to the recording studio to write and record the only single to be released from the album, "I've Got a Life", which became a commercial success, topping the US Dance Club Songs, [2] reaching the top ten in Scotland [3] and the top twenty ...
Stewart was born in 1952 in Sunderland, England, son of John ("Jack") and Sadie Stewart. [6] Distantly related both to the Dukes of Northumberland and to pirates, Stewart was from a middle-class, "well-off family", with accountant parents; he "always wanted to play with the working-class kids, but they'd always call [him] 'richie' and whack [him] on the head with cricket bats and things."