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"That's All" is a song by the English rock band Genesis. It is a group composition and appears as the second track on their self-titled album (1983). It was the album's second single after "Mama". On June 17, 1993, MCA Records re-issued and re-released the song as a CD and "HiQ" cassette single.
Genesis is the twelfth studio album by English rock band Genesis, released on 3 October 1983 by Charisma and Virgin Records in the UK and by Atlantic Records in the US and Canada. Following the band's tour in support of their 1982 live album Three Sides Live , Genesis took an eight-month break before they regrouped in the spring of 1983 to ...
Taking It All Too Hard; Tell Me Why (Genesis song) That's All (Genesis song) That's Just the Way It Is; This Is the World We Live In; Throwing It All Away; Thru These Walls; Time Table (song) Tonight, Tonight, Tonight; Trashin' the Camp; Turn It On Again; Two Hearts (Phil Collins song) Two Worlds (song)
"That's All" is song written in 1952 by Alan Brandt with music by Bob Haymes. It has been covered by many jazz and blues artists. The first recording, by Nat King Cole in 1953, achieved some popularity but was not among that year's top 20 songs.
"That's All" (1952 song), written by Alan Brandt and Bob Haymes; first recorded by Nat King Cole (1953), covered by many performers "That's All" (Genesis song), 1983 "That's All" (Merle Travis song), 1947 "That's All", by Mr and Mrs Smith and Mr Drake from Mr and Mrs Smith and Mr Drake, 1984
...Calling All Stations... (stylised in all capitals) is the fifteenth and final studio album by English rock band Genesis.It was released 1 September 1997 by Virgin Records and is their only album featuring Scottish singer Ray Wilson as frontman following the departure of long-term drummer/singer Phil Collins in 1996, making it their only album since Trespass to not involve Collins.
Genesis deliberately planned to close the album on a "lighter note" as a contrast to the heavier tracks on the record, so they placed "Follow You Follow Me" at the end. [10] This was the only track on the album that had been written during the rehearsal stage, and went through numerous interactions before the group settled on the three-minute ...
As the final song in their set, "The Knife" was performed often in the band's first five years (a live version appears on the Genesis Live album from 1973). It was dropped from their regular set for the 1973-74 tour for Selling England by the Pound, though it was occasionally played as an encore during that tour, [9] and appeared sporadically in the band's concerts through 1982.