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"Starting Over Again" is a song recorded by American entertainer Dolly Parton. The song was written by Donna Summer and her husband Bruce Sudano. [1] Parton's recording was performed as a slow tempo ballad, gradually building to a dramatic crescendo. It was released in March 1980 as the first single from her album Dolly, Dolly, Dolly.
Natalie Cole's version of "Now We're Starting Over Again" (simply titled as "Starting Over Again") was released in late 1989 in the UK and early 1990 in the U.S., being the fifth of five singles released from her 1989 album Good to Be Back, the first of which, "Miss You Like Crazy" (#7 on the Hot 100 / #1 R&B), also a Michael Masser production and co-write, becoming Cole's second major hit ...
Starting Over Again, a 2008 album by Sheryn Regis "Starting Over Again" (Natalie Cole song), recorded by Dionne Warwick, 1981 and Natalie Cole, 1989 "Starting Over Again" (Donna Summer song), recorded by Dolly Parton, 1980, and Reba McEntire, 1995 "Starting Over Again" (Steve Wariner song), a 1986 song by Steve Wariner
Starting All Over Again may refer to: "Starting All Over Again" (Mel & Tim song) "Starting All Over Again" (One Horse Blue song) See also.
Keith Caputo, lead singer of Life of Agony, announced that he was detransitioning to live as a man again, after previously living as a transgender woman. Keith plans to complete the process ...
Starting Over, a 1991 novel by Kathy Clark Gen¹³: Starting Over , a 1999 collected edition of the first seven issues of Gen¹³ (vol. 2), a WildStorm comic book series Starting Over , a 2001 novel by Penny Jordan ; the tenth installment in The Perfect Crightons series
In late-1992, not long after Jane’s Addiction broke up, Jane’s bassist Eric Avery and guitarist Dave Navarro formed the one-off musical project Deconstruction. In 1994, they released their ...
The third single, "Starting Over Again" was composed by Summer and her husband Bruce Sudano, and had originally been a number one hit for Parton in 1980; McEntire's version reached the top-twenty. The fourth and final single, a cover of the Supremes' hit " You Keep Me Hangin' On ", was not released to country radio, but did reach number 2 on ...