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"Slip Away", arranged and produced by Rick Hall, was recorded at FAME Studios in a mid-1967 recording session whose players, besides vocalist Clarence Carter himself on guitar, included visiting American Sound Studio (Memphis) session regulars Spooner Oldham on keyboards and Tommy Cogbill whose bass riffs on the track would become iconic in the canon of Southern soul: other session players ...
Following "Slip Away" and "Too Weak to Fight", it was Carter's third million-seller. [9] However, Carter's later record releases were less successful, and he left Atlantic at the end of 1971 to rejoin the Fame label. In 1975 he signed to ABC Records, releasing three albums including Loneliness and Temptation.
"Never Let Her Slip Away" is a song written by American musician Andrew Gold, who recorded it for his third album, All This and Heaven Too (1978). The single reached number five on the UK Singles Chart and number 67 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1978.
"Slip Slidin' Away" is a 1977 song written and recorded by Paul Simon which appears on his compilation album Greatest Hits, Etc. It was one of two new songs to appear on the album, the other being "Stranded in a Limousine". Backing vocals on the song are provided by The Oak Ridge Boys.
"Slip Away", a song by Presidents of the United States of America from Pure Frosting (1998) "Slip Away", a song by Laurie Anderson from Life on a String (2001)
On June 20, 2010, he appeared and sang in the season 1 finale of the HBO series Treme. As of ... "Trying to Slip Away" / "They Get Down" (from To the Roots and Back ...
Slipping Away or Slippin' Away may refer to: Slipping Away, by Tim Heidecker, 2024 "Slipping Away" (Dave Edmunds song), 1983 "Slippin' Away" (Jean Shepard song), 1973 Slippin' Away, a 1973 album of the same name "Slipping Away" (Mansun song), 2004 "Slipping Away" (Max Merritt and the Meteors song), 1975 "Slipping Away" (Moby song), 2006
Recalling the style of "Slide Away", Alex Niven wrote that the song "adopts the classic grunge technique" by combining a "heavy rock base with a melody that alludes to Neil Young and the Beatles". [8] In an interview on the bonus DVD of Stop the Clocks, Gallagher comments that the track contains his brother Liam's best ever singing.