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In 2017, Billboard ranked "You're Not Alone" number 64 in their list of "The 100 Greatest Pop Songs of 1997", praising it as "one of the year's most striking pop singles, with club energy and trip-hop atmospherics, based around Olive's soulful siren call and synths that streak across the production like an electrical storm."
Ruth-Ann Boyle (born 26 April 1970) is an English singer. Together with producers Tim Kellett and Robin Taylor-Firth, she formed the British band Olive.The band's single "You're Not Alone" reached number 1 in the UK Singles Chart on its second release in 1997.
At the 1997 Ivor Novello Awards (28 May 1998), Kellett and Taylor-Firth received the Best Dance Music award for "You're Not Alone". [14] The song was also covered as a 2002 single by German dance producer ATB. During the American leg of the Trickle promotional tour, the band suggested that 60–70% of their audience demographic at the time was gay.
"You're Not Alone" (Tinchy Stryder song), 2009 "You Are Not Alone", by Adam Brand from Speed of Life , 2020 "You Are Not Alone", by the Eagles from Long Road Out of Eden , 2007
"You Are Not Alone" is a song by American singer Michael Jackson from his ninth studio album, HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I (1995). It was released on August 15, 1995, by Epic and Sony , as the second single from the album.
"You're Not Alone" is a song written by Jim Scott [2] and recorded by the band Chicago for their 1988 album Chicago 19, with Bill Champlin singing lead vocals. When released as a single early the following year, the song peaked at #10 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 .
Owl City announced the release date of the song on September 29, 2014 along with another track, "Tokyo". [3] Young stated that the song is about "being alone in a crowd" and that the message is how "we've all been there and you're not the only person to go through that." [4] A lyrics video for the track was released on October 8, 2014. [5]
The song was praised by The Guardian for its "powerfully nagging hook" and "unshakeable chorus". [3] Nick Levine of Digital Spy gave the song and a positive review stating: "That whopping great chorus sounds as ace as ever, Stryder's rhymes are simple and good-natured, and Fraser T Smith's production gleams like the gold medallion Tinchy hangs round his neck."