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William "Holly" Johnson [1] (born 9 February 1960) is an English artist, musician, and writer, best known as the lead vocalist of Frankie Goes to Hollywood, who achieved huge commercial success in the mid-1980s.
Blast is the debut solo album by the English singer and musician Holly Johnson. It was released in 1989 and reached No. 1 in the UK Albums Chart and sold over 300,000 copies making it platinum. The album stayed on the charts for 17 weeks. The album features the hits "Love Train", "Americanos", "Atomic City" and "Heaven's Here".
Soulstream is the third studio album by British singer-songwriter Holly Johnson, which was released in 1999 on Johnson's own label, Pleasuredome.The album, which was recorded at Johnson's own home studio, contains a re-working of his hit song with Frankie Goes to Hollywood, "The Power of Love", as well as a re-working of his 1994 single "Legendary Children (All of Them Queer)".
Holly Johnson performing solo in 2014. Johnson began a solo career with MCA, and released a number-one album, Blast, in 1989. [35] His second solo album, Dreams That Money Can't Buy, released in 1991, was unsuccessful. That year, Johnson was diagnosed with HIV and retreated from public life to focus on his health. [35]
It should only contain pages that are Holly Johnson albums or lists of Holly Johnson albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Holly Johnson albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The album was issued in various formats, and each edition of the album contained different variations on the album's artwork. The regular edition CD was issued in a glossy gatefold softpack with a 12-page booklet, while a limited deluxe edition, autographed by Johnson, was presented in a glossy hardcover CD book-pack and contained two bonus ...
Dreams That Money Can't Buy is the second solo studio album by the English singer and musician Holly Johnson, released by MCA Records in 1991. The album was produced by Andy Richards, except "Penny Arcade" which was produced by Dan Hartman.
The show was recorded for the release of a live album, which was released in December. The album contains nineteen tracks, and is a mixture of Johnson's solo tracks and Frankie Goes to Hollywood songs. [2] [3] In a 2015 interview, Johnson was asked if the recording of the Koko show was pre-planned. He replied, "It was midway, actually, as the ...