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The song was released by Dupree in 1980. It immediately charted in the top 20, becoming a big hit during the summer of 1980 and the driving force on his debut album. [4] In 1991, John D'Agostino of the Los Angeles Times described the song as "a blatant, wimpy rip-off of the Michael McDonald/Kenny Loggins' composition "What a Fool Believes". [5]
The release of "Steal Away" on Fame in May 1964 was occasioned by a visit to FAME Studios by "Mr Atlanta Music" Bill Lowery, on whose say-so Hall made an initial one thousand copy pressing of "Steal Away", Hall and FAME Studios sideman Dan Penn - then twenty-three years old [6] - distributing the discs to radio stations throughout the South in ...
Steal Away might refer to: "Steal Away", an American spiritual "Steal Away" (Jimmy Hughes song), a 1964 song "Steal Away" (Robbie Dupree song), a 1980 song
"Don't Throw Your Love Away" The Searchers: 88 "Hi-Heel Sneakers" Tommy Tucker: 89 "How Do You Do It?" Gerry and the Pacemakers: 90 "Walk, Don't Run '64" The Ventures: 91 "Do You Love Me" The Dave Clark Five: 92 "Shangri-La" Robert Maxwell: 93 "Haunted House" Jumpin' Gene Simmons: 94 "Steal Away" Jimmy Hughes: 95 "I Saw Her Standing There" The ...
"Steal Away" is a standard Gospel song, and is found in the hymnals of many Protestant denominations. An arrangement of the song is included in the oratorio A Child of Our Time , first performed in 1944, by the classical composer Michael Tippett (1908–98).
On Steal Away some of the warmth afforded a duo like this naturally was blunted because any sense of real depth was virtually unable to be captured on tape, reducing the sense of intimacy. On Come Sunday, it looms large; the studio room itself becomes an equal participant in these sessions – it reflects back everything, from the sounds of ...
Home and Away's Ziggy and Dean have welcomed their baby girl, but the joy appears to be fleeting as an emotional storyline lies ahead for the new parents.
[4] [5] Although he had several regional hits, and released an album, Ted Taylor Sings, on Warwick in 1963, he did not achieve national commercial success until his 1965 recording on Okeh Records of "Stay Away From My Baby" reached number 14 on the Billboard R&B chart and number 99 on the pop chart, his only national pop chart entry. [6]