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"You Made Me Believe in Magic" is the title of a 1977 international hit single by the Bay City Rollers, taken from their album It's a Game. The recording, a mid-tempo disco-styled pop tune featuring strings and horns, had its greatest impact in North America, where it was issued as the album's lead single in May 1977 to reach number 10 on the US Hot 100 in Billboard magazine that August.
This is the discography of Scottish band Bay City Rollers. The Bay City Rollers from Prestonpans, near Edinburgh, were "the first of many acts heralded as the 'biggest group since the Beatles' and one of the most screamed-at teeny-bopper acts of the 1970s". [1] [2] During the 1970s, the Bay City Rollers achieved successes across the globe ...
It should only contain pages that are Bay City Rollers songs or lists of Bay City Rollers songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Bay City Rollers songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The song was re-recorded for the Rollers' 1974 UK album Rollin' with lead vocals by Les McKeown, Clark's replacement. In the autumn of 1975 "Saturday Night" this version was released in the US as a single (but not in the UK), reaching number one on Billboard' s Hot 100 in the issued dated 3 January 1976 — the first number one of the United ...
"Money Honey" was the Bay City Rollers' second US Top 10 hit. It reached number seven on the Cash Box chart. The follow-up single was the album's title track, "Rock and Roll Love Letter" (US No. 28). In the UK, "Money Honey" was released in November 1975 and reached number three, becoming the group's ninth Top 10 single. [3]
A version by British group The Symbols reached No. 44 in the UK Singles Chart in 1967. [7]A Japanese version by Hiromi Go was released in December 1975 in Japan and charted at No.9 in the Oricon charts, in the exact same backing sound style and step as the Rollers' version, including an eight-bar guitar solo, distributed by CBS/Sony, which appears in his second compilation album Go Hiromi no ...
The first two by the Bay City Rollers (1976) and The Tourists (1979) matched the number 4 peak of the Dusty Springfield original, while the 1989 remake by Samantha Fox peaked at number 16. The song has been a Top 40 hit in the US on the Billboard Hot 100 chart three times, with both the Dusty Springfield original and the Bay City Rollers ...
The Bay City Rollers are a Scottish pop rock group known for their worldwide teen idol popularity as a band in the 1970s. One of many 70s acts heralded as the "biggest group since the Beatles ", [ 4 ] they were called the " tartan teen sensations from Edinburgh", and sold 5 million albums.