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"Sorry Suzanne" is a 1969 single by the Hollies, co-written by Geoff Stephens and Tony Macaulay. It was the group's first song to feature Terry Sylvester in the place of Graham Nash . "Sorry Suzanne" was released with the B-side "Not That Way at All" on the Parlophone label (catalogue number R5765).
In Cash Box, it was described as a "slowly building ballad with more of the drama of “Reflections of My Life” than the Hollies' “He Ain't Heavy,” this new side from the team features the same kind of emotional impact that guarantees satisfaction for old and new-found Hollies followers". [5]
Dear Eloise / King Midas in Reverse is the seventh U.S. studio album by the British pop band the Hollies, released in November 1967."King Midas in Reverse" and "Leave Me" (saved from the UK Evolution track line-up) were slotted onto the album while deleting "Pegasus", "Try It" and "Elevated Observations" from the UK Butterfly track listing.
Here I Go Again is the title of the third EP by The Hollies.It was put out by Parlophone in mono with the catalogue number GEP 8915 and released in the UK in October 1964. All songs on this EP were previously released by the Hollies at the time.
Confessions of the Mind is the tenth studio album by the English rock and pop band the Hollies, released on November 1970.It was released in the United States as Moving Finger, with a different track sequence and the tracks "Separated" and "I Wanna Shout" replaced with the Clarke/Sylvester penned "Marigold: Gloria Swansong" saved from the previous album (Hollies Sing Hollies) and "Gasoline ...
A Crazy Steal is a eighteenth studio album by English rock and pop band the Hollies, released on 1 March 1978. [2] It includes their version of Emmylou Harris ' "Boulder to Birmingham", which had been released two years prior, reaching number 10 in the charts in New Zealand .
The LP missed the official Record Retailer album chart in the United Kingdom, but entered the Top 10 in the New Zealand chart (No. 9). National Rockstar called the album "one of the most skillfully released pop albums since Honky Château", and Girl About Town magazine in January 1976 wrote, "This album proves how creative and diversified one band and its music can be."
Romany is the twelfth studio album by the English rock and pop band the Hollies, released on November 1972.It is the band's first studio album to not feature lead singer Allan Clarke, who had left the band to embark on a solo career.