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"Uptown Girl" is a song written and performed by American musician Billy Joel from his ninth studio album An Innocent Man (1983), released in September 1983 as the album's second single. The lyrics describe a working-class " downtown man" attempting to woo a wealthy " uptown girl".
Release contains a free poster of the band and a booklet with the lyrics of the CD-songs translated to Chinese. With the same DVD track listing and bonus CD contains 5 live tracks from the same performance as the DVD: "Fool Again" "Uptown Girl" "What Makes a Man" "You Make Me Feel" "Flying Without Wings"
as Westlife; 7 2000 No No as Westlife; 8 2000 I Don't Wanna Fight as Westlife; 9 2000 Can't Lose What You Never Had as Westlife; 10 2000 My Private Movie as Westlife; 11 2000 My Love as Westlife; 12 2000 Close as Westlife; 13 2000 What Makes a Man as Westlife; 14 2000, 2001 I Lay My Love on You as Westlife; 15 2000 Angel's Wings as Westlife; 16 ...
One passage of the revealing new memoir looks back at how Diana decided to surprise her husband by dancing to Billy Joel’s "Uptown Girl" on stage at a charity event at the Royal Opera House in ...
“Uptown Girl” remains one of Joel’s biggest hits and featured Brinkley in the video, starring as a sophisticated, upper-class woman, while Joel plays a blue-collar mechanic.The duo was ...
World of Our Own is the third studio album recorded by Irish boy band Westlife.It was released through RCA Records on 12 November 2001. It reached number one in the United Kingdom and includes the singles "Queen of My Heart" (which was a double A-side with "When You're Looking Like That"), "World of Our Own" (which was a double A-side with "Angel"), "Bop Bop Baby", and the final single from ...
Back Home is the eighth studio album by Irish boy band Westlife, released on 5 November 2007 through Syco Music, Sony Music and RCA Records.The album was produced by Steve Mac, Quiz & Larossi, Per Magnusson, David Kreuger and Rami Yacoub, who also produced some of the group's previous material.
Rick Pearson of London Evening Standard called the album's songs "bland" and "uninspiring", concluding that "Where We Are finds Westlife exactly where they were at the beginning of the decade." [28] Ben Chalk of MSN UK stated that the album is "aimed squarely at the sort of person who buys one album a year, usually at Christmas, to listen to in ...