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American country music artist Crystal Gayle has released 15 music videos and 68 singles, including six as a collaborative artist, four as a featured artist, and six promos. Gayle's debut single was 1970's "I've Cried (The Blue Right Out of My Eyes)" via Decca Records, which reached number 23 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart. [1]
During the mid-1990s, Gayle began venturing into different styles of music. [3] She issued an album of Gospel music entitled Someday in 1995 and an album of Children's music in 2000, In My Arms. [1] She also recorded two albums of American standard songs during this time. Gayle's most recent was 2003's All My Tomorrows. [9]
On October 7, 2022, Gayle released her second extended play, A Study of the Human Experience Volume Two. On December 9, 2022, Gayle released a third extended play, A Study of the Human Experience Volume Two and a Half. Rather than new bodies of music, the EP consists of eight new versions of songs from her previous two extended plays.
Protozoa from "Zenon: Girl of the 21st Century" was basically the the coolest rockstar to come from Outer Space. He was a heartthrob to Zenon and girls and boys everywhere, and we all just wanted ...
Songs for Survival; Songs for the Philippines; Songs for Tibet: The Art of Peace; Songs for Tsunami Relief: Austin to South Asia; Songs That Saved My Life; The Spirit of Christmas (album series) Stairway to Heaven/Highway to Hell; Stand as One – Live at Glastonbury 2016; Stroke: Songs for Chris Knox; Such Pretty Forks in the Mix; The Sun Came Out
In 1978, it was covered by Jack Clement on his album All I Want to Do in Life. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] In his book on Johnny Cash , who recorded this song on a Jack Clement–produced album in the 1980s, John M. Alexander describes "We Must Believe in Magic" as a "whimsical piece of sound advice to hold on to our ability to always believe in magic and the ...
The accompanying music video was released alongside the single. The video was shot via a camcorder at a low resolution to evoke early 2000s home videos. In the music video, the singer and her friends visit and look around her ex's home. [11] [17]
In a front page New York Times article titled, "Country Music in Decline," this album was noted as one of many that were indicative of a trend, marking "the end of an era" for the genre: despite two top 5 hits, "Crystal Gayle's latest album sold fewer than 80,000 copies" six months after its release.