Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Oh No" is an R&B ballad from the 1981 Commodores album In the Pocket. Written by Lionel Richie , the song was released as a single in 1981, being his last hit with the Commodores before going solo. Similarities of the song's opening bars can be heard in Richie's 1981 duet " Endless Love " with Diana Ross .
Lionel Richie: Lionel Richie chronology; Louder Than Words (1996) Truly: The Love Songs (1997) ... All romantic love songs by Lionel Richie, unless stated otherwise.
Commodores were formed from two former student groups: the Mystics and the Jays. Richie described some members of the Mystics as "jazz buffs". [5] The new six-man band featured Lionel Richie, Thomas McClary, and William King from the Mystics, and Andre Callahan, Michael Gilbert, and Milan Williams from the Jays. They chose their present name ...
My Love (Lionel Richie song) O. Oh No (Commodores song) P. Penny Lover; Push Up on Me; R. Reason to Believe (Lionel Richie song) Running with the Night; S. Sail On (song)
To be sure, Richie tells plenty of those stories in the documentary, sharing in fascinating detail—along with participants such as Bruce Springsteen, Cyndi Lauper and Dionne Warwick—how on a ...
"All Night Long (All Night)" is a song by American singer and songwriter Lionel Richie from his second solo album, Can't Slow Down (1983). The song combined Richie's Commodores style with Caribbean influences.
Richie is a popular musician in various Arab states, [41] [42] and has performed in Morocco, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Libya. [43] John Berman for ABC News reported in 2006 that "Grown Iraqi men get misty-eyed by the mere mention of his name. 'I love Lionel Richie,' they say. They can sing an entire Lionel Richie song."
Furthermore, they have gone beyond the simplistic boy -loves -girl and dance -dance -dance lyrics that are the formula staples of contemporary soul music. The album offers plenty of the kind of soul funk we have come to expect of the Commodores, performed with stunning precision, but there are also some interesting variations."