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The duet featuring Ray Charles and Van Morrison as performed at the 2003 SHOF awards is one of the 31 songs on the compilation album The Best of Van Morrison Volume 3 released in 2007. The original version from Moondance is one of the hits included on the 2007 compilation album, Still on Top - The Greatest Hits.
The song was first recorded as a duet by Gloria Loring and Carl Anderson in 1985 for the soap opera Days of Our Lives, produced by Doug Lenier. That recording remained unreleased until the summer of 1986, when it was released shortly after a version by Juice Newton and Eddie Rabbitt hit country radio.
The song was the love theme from the comedy film Leonard Part 6, [1] released the same year, [5] and was also recorded for the Peabo Bryson album Positive, [2] released in 1988, [2] the only album that contains the original version of "Without You".
Ross recorded a solo version of the song for her first RCA Records album, Why Do Fools Fall in Love, the duet version being her last hit on Motown. Richie's solo version was released as track 10 on the 2003 remastered bonus edition of his 1982 album.
In 2013, Toby Love covered the Spanish version of the song in bachata as the second single from his album Amor Total. His version reached number one on the Billboard Tropical Songs chart and in the Dominican Republic. [21] [22] Love's cover led to Rubén Blades receiving the ASCAP Latin Award on the Tropical category in 2014. [23]
An instrumental version of this song appears on flutist James Galway's 1988 album Greatest Hits. [8] A duet by Denver and Lene Siel was recorded in 1996 and released on Siel's album Mine Favoritter. The song was covered by Jose Mari Chan in a duet with his daughter, Liza. Richard Clayderman has also performed an instrumental version of the song ...
The Complete Duets is a two-disc compilation album of duet recordings by Motown Records artists Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, recorded between 1965 and 1969.The set compiles all of the tracks from the duo's three albums - United, You're All I Need and Easy - as well as several of Tammi Terrell's solo recordings and other previously unissued material.
The song appears in the opening credits of the 1998 film The Parent Trap. [18] A version by Michael Feinstein is the theme song for season 1 of the series Why Women Kill. In the talent show scene of the 1994 film The Little Rascals, Blake McIver Ewing's Waldo performs the song as a duet with Brittany Ashton Holmes' Darla.