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It should only contain pages that are The Sweet songs or lists of The Sweet songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Sweet songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
[citation needed] The lyrics refer to Sweet's negative treatment as pop stars, particularly by the music press, and to the demands of the music industry. The track features a masked "backwards vocal" with the words "You kiss my arse".
Title Album details Live at the Marquee: Released: March 1989; Label: SPV, Maze; Formats: CD, 2×LP; Rock & Roll Disgrace – Live in Japan: Released: November 1992
Give Us a Wink is the fourth studio album by British rock band Sweet.It was the first album to be fully written and produced by the band members. Previously they had relied on material from the songwriting team of Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman.
Sweet also adopted a more conventional hard rock sound and appearance. Sweet Fanny Adams also featured compressed high-pitched backing vocal harmonies, which was a trend that continued on all of Sweet's albums. [citation needed] During sessions for the album, Brian Connolly was injured in a fight in Staines, on High Street. His throat was badly ...
"The Six Teens" (often spelled as "The Sixteens") is a 1974 song by British glam rock band Sweet, written by Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman, appearing on Sweet's album Desolation Boulevard. The song was Sweet's first single simply as "Sweet" (previously, the band was known as The Sweet). The B-side is the band composition "Burn on the Flame".
"Fox on the Run" is a 1975 song by the British glam rock band Sweet, first recorded in 1974. It was the first Sweet single with the A-side written by the band, rather than by producers Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman, and was their 14th single overall. The song became the best charting single in Australia in 1975, with six weeks at number one. [6]
The song featured a significant change in the band's sound, and is often considered the band's first glam rock single. [citation needed] Also, this was the first Sweet single with bass player Steve Priest singing some parts of the lead vocal: the "try a little touch, try a little too much" line at the chorus. This became an important part of ...