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"Slow Hand" is a song recorded by American vocal group The Pointer Sisters for their eighth studio album Black & White (1981). The song, written by Michael Clark and John Bettis , was released by the Planet label in May 1981 as the lead single from Black & White .
The first disc consists of the remastered album with additional bonus tracks, outtakes and studio jam sessions. The second disc features a previously unreleased live concert, recorded in April 1977 at the Hammersmith Odeon ; although the concert is of the same era as the Slowhand sessions, it was performed prior to the album's recording and ...
Slow Hand", a 1981 song by The Pointer Sisters; Slowhand, an allbum by Eric Clapton, 1977 This page was last edited on 27 August 2024, at 23:15 (UTC). Text is ...
"Slow Hands" is a song recorded by Irish singer-songwriter Niall Horan, released as a single on 4 May 2017 by Capitol Records. [2] The song was written by Horan, Alexander Izquierdo, John Ryan, Julian Bunetta, Ruth Anne Cunningham and Tobias Jesso Jr., while the production was handled by Bunetta. [ 3 ]
The first Top 40 hit to feature Ruth Pointer's distinctive contralto on lead, "Automatic" reached #5 on the Hot 100 in Billboard in April 1984, also charting on the magazine's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Dance Club Play rankings, its #2 R&B chart peak making "Automatic" the highest charting R&B hit by the Pointer Sisters as a trio (in their ...
[57] The Beatles later recorded covers of Matchbox, Honey Don't and Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby which Perkins adapted from a song originally recorded in 1936 by Rex Griffin which he added new music to. (A song with the same title was recorded by Roy Newman in 1938). Ringo sang the lead on the first two, George Harrison sang a rare lead on ...
"I think it was an Aries K car at first. And then it was a Toyota Corolla," she said with a laugh. "No, no fast cars. I'll just fix up my old car. It's a 1980 Tercel with, like, 99,000 miles on it
Frankie Laine (born Francesco Paolo LoVecchio; March 30, 1913 – February 6, 2007) was an American singer and songwriter whose career spanned nearly 75 years, from his first concerts in 1930 with a marathon dance company to his final performance of "That's My Desire" in 2005.