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Love and Money are a Scottish rock/soul/funk band, formed in 1985 in Glasgow, Scotland.The band was formed by three former members of Friends Again (singer-songwriter and guitarist James Grant, drummer Stuart Kerr and keyboardist Paul McGeechan) along with bassist Bobby Paterson, who replaced Friends Again's Neil Cunningham and who had been a member of Set the Tone, a band previously signed to ...
Love & Money is an American sitcom television series created by Rob Long and Dan Staley, that aired from CBS on October 8, 1999 to July 18, 2000.
Love and Money (band), a Scottish rock/soul/funk band; Love and Money, an album by Eddie Money; Love and Money, a 1982 drama; Love and Money, a play by Dennis Kelly; Love & Money, an American TV sitcom "Love and Money", an episode of the British television sitcom You Rang, M'Lord? "Love and Money", a song by Bronski Beat from the album The Age ...
"Halleluiah Man" is a song by Scottish band Love and Money, which was released in 1988 as the lead single from their second studio album Strange Kind of Love. The song was written by James Grant and produced by Gary Katz. "Halleluiah Man" reached No. 63 in the UK Singles Chart and No. 75 on the US Billboard Hot 100. [2] [3]
The two parties were unable to come to an agreement, resulting in Love and Money leaving the label in late 1992 and completing the recording of Littledeath themselves. [ 3 ] Once completed, the band secured a deal to release Littledeath on the Glasgow-based independent label Iona Gold.
"Dear John" is a song by Scottish band Love and Money, released in 1986 as the second single from their debut studio album All You Need Is.... The song was written by James Grant and produced by Tom Dowd.
When Friends Again split in 1985, Grant went on to form Love and Money along with drummer Stuart Kerr and keyboardist Paul McGeechan. In their nine years together, they recorded four moderately successful albums, All You Need Is..., Strange Kind of Love, Dogs in the Traffic and Littledeath, and had six chart hits in the United Kingdom.
On its release as a single, Peter Kinghorn of the Evening Chronicle described "Winter" as a "reflective song" which is "strong on melody". [7] In a review of the intended May 1991 release, Steve Stewart of The Press and Journal gave "Winter" three stars and wrote, "This is a bit of a departure for Love and Money, after the slick production of Strange Kind of Love.