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"Harbour Lights" (song), a 1937 song by Hugh Williams (pseudonym for Will Grosz) with lyrics by Jimmy Kennedy; Harbor Lights (Bruce Hornsby album), 1993; Harbor Lights (Cristy Lane album), 1985 "Harbor Lights", a track from the 1976 Boz Scaggs' album Silk Degrees "Harbour Lights", a track from the 2012 A Silent Film album Sand & Snow
The album marked Scaggs's commercial zenith, a mix of pop rock ("Jump Street" and "Lido Shuffle"), soul ("What Can I Say" and "Lowdown"), and ballads ("Harbor Lights" and "We're All Alone", which became a hit for Rita Coolidge). Scaggs wrote "Jump Street" 10 minutes before recording it, only having a rough idea of the lyrics.
As he neared the coast a fog descended and he was confused about the direction. He saw some lights on a pub and decided to stop. The pub was called The Harbour Lights. Some time later he wrote the lyric and music was added. The song Harbour Lights was recorded by the Platters and many others. A blue plaque is today fixed to the wall of the pub.
William Royce "Boz" Scaggs (born June 8, 1944) is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist. [2] He was a bandmate of Steve Miller in the Ardells in the early 1960s and the Steve Miller Band from 1967 to 1968.
Fade into Light is the twelfth studio album by American musician Boz Scaggs, released in Japan in 1996 and the U.S. in 2005. The album was a mix of new original compositions and new recordings of Scaggs' classic hits.
My Time: A Boz Scaggs Anthology (1969–1997) is an anthology album by Boz Scaggs. ... "Harbor Lights" – 5:57 "Lowdown" – 5:16 "Lido Shuffle" – 3:43
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Boz Scaggs is the second studio album by American musician Boz Scaggs, released in 1969 by Atlantic Records. [a] A stylistically diverse album, Boz Scaggs incorporates several genres, including Americana, blue-eyed soul, country, and rhythm and blues. The lyrics are about typical themes found in blues songs, such as love, regret, guilt, and loss.