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A Man and a Woman is a duet live album by American singers Isaac Hayes and Dionne Warwick, released in 1977 by ABC Records. The album was recorded during one of the concerts of the artists' 1976 joint tour. It was also able to get into the top twenty of Billboard's soul chart. [4]
Sometimes You Win is a studio album by the American band Dr. Hook, released in 1979.It was produced by Ron Haffkine. [2]The album contains three of the band's most commercially successful singles: "When You're in Love with a Beautiful Woman" (also included on their previous album Pleasure and Pain), "Better Love Next Time" and "Sexy Eyes."
"When You're in Love with a Beautiful Woman" is a song by Dr. Hook. It was recorded at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, Alabama. [1] [2]Written by Even Stevens, who followed producer Ron Haffkine into the studio bathroom to pitch him the song, "When You're in Love with a Beautiful Woman" which first appeared on the band's 1978 album Pleasure and Pain.
Natalie Cole's musical choices include songs that depict the various aspects of love—its joy, its sorrow, its loneliness, and its consolation. Included are two of Dinah Washington 's gems -- "I Haven't Got Anything Better to Do" and the title track, "Ask a Woman Who Knows"—both songs about love gone wrong.
Pleasure and Pain is the seventh album from the country rock band Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show. It featured two U.S. Top 10 hits, "Sharing the Night Together" and "When You're in Love with a Beautiful Woman." Both songs also became chart hits in the UK, Canada and Australia. This particular Dr. Hook album was pressed with two different track ...
A Man and a Woman (Johnny Lytle album), 1967; A Mann & a Woman, an album by Herbie Mann and Tamiko Jones, 1967; A Man and a Woman (Isaac Hayes and Dionne Warwick album), 1977 "A Man and a Woman" ("Un homme et une femme" in French), title song of the 1966 film A Man and a Woman "A Man and a Woman" (song), a song by U2, 2004
The album's concept was built off the title track, "Still a Woman," which Smith co-wrote with Mack David and Norro Wilson. The song (and album) was meant to marketed towards middle-aged women and mothers, according to Smith. [3] She also wrote three additional tracks for the project. This included "You're the Song," which is a recitation.
The record became LaBelle's second album, since This Christmas (1990), to not be RIAA-certified. The sole single from When a Woman Loves, "Call Me Gone", likewise failed to chart on the Hot 100, and was given poor radio promotion. Though the title track did receive some airplay, and LaBelle performed the song occasionally during the record's ...