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Bands Reunited is a television program produced by VH1 in 2004. Hosted by Aamer Haleem, the show documents attempted reunions of formerly popular musical groups for special concerts in either London or Los Angeles .
All of the members of the 1982–1987 line-up of the band reunited in 2004 for an appearance on VH1's Bands Reunited; rejoining Davis were Michael Goodroe, Marty Jourard, Brian Glascock and Adrian Peritore (a.k.a. Guy Perry). [21] On August 9, 2011, the original version of The Motels' third album, Apocalypso, was released by Omnivore Recordings ...
Rolling Stone – The Motels return with their "Version 2.0" – September 2, 1999; Orange County Register – Entertainment section – July 16, 2005; Personal writings from band members – Official website themotels.com; Former band member Marty Jourard – Jourard.com; Creem – Take the El out of Motels and it's Mots – February 1983
"Take the L" is a song by American new wave band The Motels, which was released in 1982 as the second single from their third studio album All Four One. The song was written by Marty Jourard, Martha Davis and Carter, and produced by Val Garay. "Take the L" peaked at number 52 on the US Billboard Hot 100. [1]
VH1 Top 20 Video Countdown: October 28, 1994: November 28, 2015 Pop-Up Video: October 27, 1996: September 21, 2012 Crossroads [a] October 31, 1994: 1998 8-Track Flashback: September 23, 1995: February 15, 1998 VH1 Dance Machine: 1997: 1998 Emma: October 8, 1999: November 5, 1999 Insomniac Music Theater: 1999: 2005 Nocturnal State: August 2005 ...
In 1999, Score recorded a song for the compilation album Trackspotting V, titled "All I Wanna Do". It is the eighth track (out of 18) on the album, and he is credited as "Scorey". In 2003, the original members of A Flock of Seagulls were brought together by VH1's Bands Reunited.
Despite its rough beginnings, All Four One was the first U.S. hit album for The Motels, and was the band's best selling album. The first single from All Four One was " Only the Lonely ", which reached No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 27 on the Adult Contemporary chart, [ 6 ] as well as No. 6 on the Billboard Top Tracks chart.
A 2004 episode of VH1's Bands Reunited, caused a brief controversy when Harland refused to appear in an Information Society reunion performance, despite apparently accepting the invitation on-camera by signing a copy of their first album.