Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Just My Imagination" was the result of one of the few times that Whitfield relented and produced a ballad as a single for the group. Whitfield and Strong wrote the song in 1969, but with the Temptations' psychedelic soul singles consistently keeping them in the US Top 20, Whitfield and Strong decided to shelve the composition and wait for the ...
"Just My Imagination" – 3:41 "God Be with You" – 3:32 "God Be with You" was written by Dolores O'Riordan and produced by O'Riordan and Bruce Fairbairn in 1997. Other members of the band do not appear on that track. The song was originally released for "The Devil's Own" movie soundtrack. UK CD single 1 [2] "Just My Imagination" – 3:41
The Cranberries were an Irish rock band formed in Limerick in 1989. The band was originally named The Cranberry Saw Us, and featured singer Niall Quinn, guitarist Noel Hogan, bassist Mike Hogan (Noel's brother), and drummer Fergal Lawler; Quinn was replaced as lead singer by Dolores O'Riordan in 1990, and the group changed their name to the Cranberries.
The first of these was Sky's the Limit's second single, "Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)", which Whitfield and Barrett Strong had written in 1969 but shelved. "Just My Imagination" became the group's third number-one hit.
"Just My Imagination" Recorded by the Temptations Co-written with Whitfield: 1 1 72 — 8 [25] [29] 1972 "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" Recorded by the Undisputed Truth Co-written with Whitfield: 63 24 — — — [30] 1972 "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" Recorded by the Temptations Co-written with Whitfield: 1 — 12 42 8 [31] [32] 1973
The Temptations Wish It Would Rain is the seventh studio album by the Temptations, released in 1968 via Gordy Records.It was the final release from the group's "Classic-5" era, during which David Ruffin, Eddie Kendricks, Paul Williams, Melvin Franklin, and Otis Williams constituted the Temptations' lineup.
There are numerous hits for English and Welsh versions, all with the bawdy lyrics, and I guess if anyone knows about traditional bawdy raucous rugby songs, those good folk would. Singing it after "Happy Birthday" is listed here as among the cliches Australians most love to hate, so that definitely proves it has a solid presence here.
"I Second That Emotion" is a 1967 song written by Smokey Robinson and Al Cleveland. First charting as a hit for Smokey Robinson and the Miracles on the Tamla/Motown label in 1967, "I Second That Emotion" was later a hit single for the group duet Diana Ross & the Supremes and the Temptations, also on the Motown label.