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The band emerged in the mid-1980s with a series of multi-platinum studio albums and hit singles whose music videos received heavy MTV rotation and popularity. Cinderella initially had a glam metal sound throughout the late 1980s before shifting into a more blues rock-based sound during the early to mid 1990s. [1] [2]
"Shelter Me" is a song by American rock band Cinderella. It serves as the lead single from the band's third studio album, Heartbreak Station . [ 3 ] It peaked at #36 on the Billboard Hot 100 .
The music video continues the storyline from where the "Shake Me" video left off, following the Cinderella-like girl as she accompanies the band to their rehearsal space, with the wicked sisters in pursuit. As the band performs the song, the girl runs home for the stroke of midnight when her rocker outfit changes back to a plain white dress.
Longtime guitarist Jeff LaBar, whose decades of performing included massive success with the rock group Cinderella, died Wednesday at age 58. “It’s unimaginable that one of our band brothers ...
Jeff LaBar, guitarist for the hard rock band Cinderella, which rose to multi-platinum status in the late 1980s, has died at age 58. No cause of death has been given. Cinderella had not recorded an ...
Night Songs: The Videos (1987) - VHS Gold (RIAA) [10] Tales from the Gypsy Road (1990) - VHS (Later reissued as 2009 DVD) Gold (RIAA) [10] Heartbreak Station Video Collection (1991) - VHS; Looking Back Video Collection (1997) - VHS; Cinderella Millennium DVD Video Collection (2003) - DVD; Rocked, Wired & Bluesed – The Greatest Video Hits ...
These live songs were, along with their three MTV videos, released on home video in August 1987 on Night Songs: The Videos. Night Songs sold several million copies due to a combination of Cinderella's breakthrough single "Nobody's Fool", MTV airplay, and an opening slot on labelmates Bon Jovi's tour, in support of their album Slippery When Wet.
"Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)" is a power ballad [3] [4] by American rock band Cinderella from their second album, Long Cold Winter. Written by frontman Tom Keifer, it was released in August 1988 and was their most successful single, peaking at number 12 on US Billboard Hot 100 in November 1988.