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In 2021, British magazine Classic Pop ranked "You'll Never Stop Me Loving You" number 27 on their list of the "Top 40 Stock Aitken Waterman songs", adding: "18-year-old Sonia Evans was a complete unknown when she approached Pete Waterman for a break in the biz, and luckily SAW, er, saw potential in the effervescent, ginger-haired scouser ...
Generally critical of SAW-produced singles, David Giles of Music Week praised "Listen to Your Heart", calling it a "fine song" which he considered "a hundred times better than ["You'll Never Stop Me Loving You"]", adding: "The chorus is standard fare, but the verse simmers nicely". [2]
"You'll Never Stop Me Loving You" 1 10* 29 Everybody Knows: 24 Jul 1989 Kylie Minogue "Wouldn't Change a Thing" 2 [16]-- 8 Enjoy Yourself: 07 Aug 1989 Rick Astley "Ain't Too Proud to Beg" Holland, Whitfield -- 89 -- Hold Me in Your Arms: 12 Aug 1989 Big Fun "Blame It on the Boogie" Jackson, Jackson, Krohn 4 -- 37 A Pocketful of Dreams: 14 Aug 1989
The album features the singles "Only Fools (Never Fall in Love)", "Be Young, Be Foolish, Be Happy" and "You to Me Are Everything", [4] all of which were hits in the UK Singles Chart, while the album itself reached No.33. [5] The single Walk Away Lover was number 14 at Cash Box Pop Singles Looking Ahead.
"You Can Never Stop Me Loving You" Single by Johnny Tillotson; from the album You Can Never Stop Me Loving You ; B-side "Judy, Judy, Judy" Released: 1963: Recorded: July 1, 1963 [1]: Genre
If I Never Stop Loving You is the second and final studio album by American country music artist David Kersh. Its title track was a Top 5 hit on the country music charts in 1998; "Wonderful Tonight" (a cover of Eric Clapton 's single) and "Something to Think About" were also released as singles .
Pete Waterman Presents The Hit Factory is a compilation album released in July 2012 collecting 39 hits produced by Pete Waterman.Included are a vast number of tracks that were written and produced by Waterman along with Mike Stock and Matt Aitken during their most successful period working as Stock Aitken Waterman, becoming among the most successful music producers of all-time.
The song served as the template for Daryl Hall's song "Stop Loving Me, Stop Loving You," from his 1993 solo album, Soul Alone. [2] After being played the song by a friend and thinking it was an unreleased bootleg, Hall reworked the tune as a standard-structured R&B/pop song.