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Going Back is the eighth solo studio album by English singer-songwriter and drummer Phil Collins, released on 13 September 2010 by Atlantic Records. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] His first solo album in eight years, it features covers of 1960s Motown and soul standards .
"Goin' Back" has also been recorded by Eydie Gormé (album: It Was a Good Time, 1971), Johnny Logan (album: Straight From the Heart, 1985), Marianne Faithfull (album: Horses and High Heels, 2011), and by Phil Collins in 2010 (Going Back, where it served as the title track).
In summer 2010, Collins played six concerts with the music from Going Back. These included a special programme, Phil Collins: One Night Only, aired on ITV1 on 18 September 2010. Collins also promoted Going Back with his first and only appearance on the BBC's music series Later... with Jools Holland, broadcast on 17 September 2010. [150]
The Long Goodnight – A Film About Phil Collins. Released: 11 June 2007; Studio: Phillip Collins Ltd; Format: DVD; A tour documentary; 2010 Going Back – Live at Roseland Ballroom, NYC. Released: 1 November 2010; Studio: Eagle Vision (#EREDV808) Format: DVD, Blu-ray; MC: Gold [22] A performance from the Going Back tour; 2012 Live at Montreux 2004
[9] [10] Nor was it included on Hello, I Must Be Going!, as many newer songs were written for it. Eventually, Collins presented the demo to Taylor Hackford when approached to write a song for the Against All Odds movie, which he loved. Then Collins penned the lyrics, which were for the film. [10]
Going Back may refer to: Going Back, a 2010 album by Phil Collins; Going Back, a 1983 film starring Bruce Campbell; Going Back, aka Under Heavy Fire, a 2001 TV film with Casper Van Dien "Goin' Back", a 1966 song written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King
In 2001, siblings Brandy and Ray J covered the song for the Phil Collins tribute album Urban Renewal. Produced by Guy Roche and released as the album's lead single in March 2001, the cover version became a top-10 success in Australia and across Europe, receiving gold certifications in Australia (35,000), France (250,000), Germany (250,000), and ...
Collins later said that he sang this at Charles, Prince of Wales' 40th-birthday party, not knowing that the Prince's divorce from his wife, Diana, Princess of Wales, would happen a short time later. [20] The Phil Collins Big Band played this live on tour. [20] "Take Me Home" is another song in which the meaning was originally very vague.