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"Reflections of My Life" was a 1969/1970 hit single for the Scottish band, Marmalade. [2] It was written by their lead guitarist Junior Campbell and singer Dean Ford (credited to his birth name, Thomas McAleese). [3] Released in late 1969, it was the band's first release on Decca following an earlier spell at CBS. [4]
Smith departed in 1977 to join Nicholson in Blue and Garth Watt-Roy came in briefly for Marmalade's Only Light On My Horizon Now album, before leaving for the Q-Tips in 1978. He was replaced by guitarist Ian Withington, who appeared alongside Knight, Newman and new drummer Stu Williamson for the next album Doing It All For You (1979).
Junior Campbell (born William Campbell Jnr, 31 May 1947) is a Scottish composer, songwriter and musician. [1] He was a founding member, lead guitarist, pianist, and singer with the Scottish band Marmalade and co-wrote and produced some of their biggest successes, including "Reflections of My Life", "I See the Rain" and "Rainbow".
As the Marmalade "It's All Leading Up to Saturday Night" b/w "Wait A Minute, Baby" 1966 — — — — — — — — — — Non-album singles "Can't Stop Now"
Another version of the song, "All My Sorrows", was made popular by the Kingston Trio, who recorded it in 1959, followed by The Shadows in 1961 and The Searchers in 1963 on Sugar and Spice; The melody and chord changes were used as the basis of the Brandywine Singers' "Summer's Come and Gone" (Billboard No. 129, 1963). [citation needed]
Filmmaker Michael McGowan brings “All My Puny Sorrows,” his adaptation of beloved writer Miriam Toews’ novel, to the Toronto International Film Festival. The book, which McGowan adapted for ...
"Rainbow" was the follow-up single to the UK top-three and US top-ten single "Reflections of My Life".Billboard wrote that "this folk flavored rhythm ballad follow up has all the sales and chart potency of the recent smash". [3]
Miriam Toews’ 2014 novel “All My Puny Sorrows” thrives on the kind of fraught tonal whiplash that comes with the most intimate of relationships to one’s subject. Inspired by the suicide of ...