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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.
"You Made Me Believe in Magic" was released as a second single in the territories where the "It's a Game" single had been a hit, with "You Made Me Believe in Magic" proving significantly less popular than the precedent single, the relevant peaks for "You Made Me Believe in Magic" being Australia – No. 36, Germany – No. 25, New Zealand ...
"You Made Me Believe in Magic" Len Boone: It's a Game: 2:40: 9. "Don't Stop the Music" Eric Faulkner; ... Stuart "Woody" Wood – Guitar, bass, piano, mandolin ...
The follow-up "You Made Me Believe in Magic" made No. 34 in July in the UK and No. 10 in the U.S., and this single was their final major success. [ 17 ] The Bay City Rollers were on The Krofft Superstar Hour , later named the Bay City Rollers Show , an hour-long show that aired from September 9, 1978, to January 27, 1979.
Bay City Rollers, released in late 1975, was the first full-length album by Scotland's Bay City Rollers to be issued in the US and Canada. The compilation, which hit No. 1 in the RPM Canadian album chart on 7 February 1976 [4] and reached as high as No. 20 on the US album chart, included the US and Canadian #1 hit single "Saturday Night".
Rock N'Roll Love Letter is an album by the Bay City Rollers.It was a North America-only release, issued in early 1976 by Arista Records, catalogue #4071.. Of the record's 11 tracks, two were lifted from the Rollers' 1975's UK release Once Upon a Star; seven came from Wouldn't You Like It?; and two were newly recorded singles.
Ian Mitchell was a Northern Irish [1] musician. He was a member of Bay City Rollers for seven months in 1976. [2] He was the first non-Scot to join the group. [1] [2] [3]Mitchell was a member of Young City Stars when he was asked by BCR manager Tam Paton to replace Alan Longmuir.
Stuart John Wood was born and raised in Edinburgh.He grew up listening to jazz and classical such as Louis Armstrong and Glenn Miller, and wasn't interested in pop music until he was 14–15 when he friend asked him to play guitar in a pop band he was forming in school.