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Wright later won the Best R&B Song Grammy Award for composing "Where Is the Love". [4] A second prominent overseas hit was another proto-disco number "Shoorah! Shoorah!", issued on Alston and written by Allen Toussaint. [11] Both songs appeared on one of Wright's most popular albums, Danger! High Voltage!, released in late 1974. [12]
"Clean Up Woman" is a song by Betty Wright from her second studio album, I Love the Way You Love (1972). Written and produced by Clarence Reid and Willie Clarke, it was released in November 1971 in the U.S. as a 7" single with "I'll Love You Forever" on the B-side. The song's distinctive guitar lick was played by Willie "Little Beaver" Hale.
Playlist: The Very Best of Destiny's Child is the third compilation album by American R&B girl group Destiny's Child. It was released on October 9, 2012, through Columbia Records matching with the fifteenth anniversary of Destiny's Child's formation. The compilation contained fourteen songs from the group's repertoire consisting of four studio ...
Come Clean is the debut studio album by American rock band Puddle of Mudd. Released on August 28, 2001, the album's music was responsible for breaking Puddle of Mudd into the mainstream music scene. It features the singles "Control," "Blurry," "Drift & Die" and "She Hates Me".
In the early 2020s, Atlantic put pressure on the band to adapt their sound, as they felt that songs needed to belong on Spotify dance music playlists. For several years, Clean Bandit's releases were darker and closer to house music, and were less successful. Eventually the band negotiated an exit from their label and joined Ministry of Sound ...
Betty Wright Live (1978), by Betty Wright, includes a medley version of "Clean Up Woman" that includes parts of "Midnight at the Oasis". The Sun City Girls released a version of the song on their album Midnight Cowboys from Ipanema (1986). The American jazz guitarist Steve Oliver released a version of the song on his album First View (1993).
The song was from the soundtrack of the MGM film The Trouble with Girls, and was later included on the budget RCA Camden album Almost In Love. Although The Trouble with Girls is set in the 1920s, several lyrics within this song are anachronistic for the era, such as a reference to "armchair quarterbacks", a term not coined until the advent of ...