Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Adam Faith Singles Collection – His Greatest Hits: Released: January 1990; Label: EMI — The E.P. Collection: Released: 1991; Label: See for Miles — The Best of the EMI Years: Released: 1994; Label: EMI — The Very Best of Adam Faith: Released: 13 October 1997; Label: Music for Pleasure — Greatest Hits: Released: 27 July 1998; Label ...
Pleasure is an American band from Portland, Oregon, United States. Blending soul, funk and jazz with a street edge, they became a cult group on the underground black music scene of the late 1970s. Blending soul, funk and jazz with a street edge, they became a cult group on the underground black music scene of the late 1970s.
Eddy Grant has released 15 studio albums, 13 compilation albums and 19 singles. His album Killer on the Rampage peaked at number 10 on the Billboard 200 chart in the US and was certified gold.
After the breakup of Trip Shakespeare, Wilson and Munson joined up with drummer Slichter to form the band Pleasure in 1993. [1] By 1995, they had changed their name to Semisonic. An EP, Pleasure, was released that year on Boston indie label CherryDisc, and the studio full-length Great Divide in 1996 on MCA.
During 1994 Pleasure joined Earth, Wind & Fire as the band's new musical director. Pleasure went on to play keyboards on EW&F's 1996 album Greatest Hits Live, 1997 album In the Name of Love and 2004 DVD at Montreux 1997. [4] [1] [5] He also featured on Najee's 1994 album Share My World and Marion Meadows' 1994 LP Forbidden Fruit.
Paul Frederick Jabara (January 31, 1948 – September 29, 1992), was an American actor, singer, and songwriter. [1] He wrote Donna Summer's Oscar-winning "Last Dance" from Thank God It's Friday (1978), as well as "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)", Summer's international hit duet with Barbra Streisand.
Label: Music for Pleasure; Formats: LP, MC — — — 1978 Greatest Hits 1976–1978: ... Greatest Hits 1976–1978 "A Little Bit of Soap" 5 — — — — 43
Besides hits like "Paradise by the Dashboard Light" and "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)", The Very Best of Meat Loaf contains three new tracks. Two of those are written by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Jim Steinman and are adapted from their musical Whistle Down the Wind ; both of these tracks were produced by Steinman.