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"Love Hurts" is a song written and composed by the American songwriter Boudleaux Bryant. First recorded by the Everly Brothers in July 1960, the song is most well known in two hit versions by UK artists; by Scottish hard rock band Nazareth in 1974 and by English singer-songwriter Jim Capaldi in 1975.
Nazareth is the debut album by the Scottish hard rock band Nazareth, released in 1971. [4] The album featured the hit single "Dear John" and a cover of " Morning Dew ." [ 5 ]
"Holiday" is a song by Nazareth from their 1980 album Malice in Wonderland. The single reached No. 87 on the Billboard Hot 100, [3] their only charting song apart from Love Hurts. The music video features the arcade game "Super Road Champions" [citation needed]. The song has also appeared on the 2002 compilation album "Nazology: Best of ...
Hot Tracks is a compilation album by the Scottish hard rock band Nazareth, released in 1976. The album covers from 1973's Razamanaz album to 1976's Play 'n' the Game . The album also features a slightly longer version of "This Flight Tonight" and the single version of "I Want to Do Everything for You".
Manny Charlton, the founding guitarist of Nazareth who played on the Scottish rock band’s best-known records, including “Love Hurts”, its LP Hair of the Dog, and also produced early Guns N ...
The release of the album coincided with Nazareth's fortieth anniversary tour, which started on 25 January in Sweden and visited most of Europe, finished on 4 November 2008 in Norway. A follow-up album, Big Dogz, was released on 15 April 2011. Jimmy Murrison and Linton Osborne at Picture On Festival, August 2014
Expect No Mercy is the ninth studio album by Scottish hard rock band Nazareth, released in 1977.The original version was rejected by the label and these versions were the bonus tracks on the Salvo CD.
"Love Hurts" was released to alternative radio in October 2008, and hit number one on Billboard's Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart for the week ending February 21, 2009.It joins "Drive", "Megalomaniac", and "Anna Molly" as one of four songs by the band to top the chart, and their only secondary single from an album era to accomplish this feat.