Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Out of Touch" is a song by American duo Daryl Hall & John Oates from their twelfth studio album Big Bam Boom (1984). The song was released as the lead single from Big Bam Boom on Thursday, October 4, 1984, by RCA Records .
The lead single "Out of Touch" was a #1 pop hit, and charted in several other areas (#24 Hot Black Singles, #8 on the Adult Contemporary charts and #1 on the dance charts, #48 in the UK). Another song, the Daryl Hall and Janna Allen -penned " Method of Modern Love ", reached #5, and "Some Things Are Better Left Unsaid" reached #18.
After their 2005 hit "Out of Touch", which was the debut and most successful single of the band, Craig Powell joined in as frontman of the band. A number of songs on the Uniting Nations' debut and only album One World, released in 2005 on Gut Records, were also performed by vocalist and session artist Jinian Wilde.
"Out of Touch" is a pop-rock song above a "mellow, mid-tempo guitar riff". [6] The song was written in the key of B major with a tempo of 80 beats per minute. [7] The song is about Cameron "recovering from a tiff with her lover and how she hopes to reconcile" and "wanting this person to keep being honest with her, even when she doesn't handle it well".
Out of Touch" is a song by Hall & Oates, from the album Big Bam Boom. Out of Touch may also refer to: Out of touch (phrase) or "square" "Out of Touch" (Dove Cameron song) "Out of Touch", by The Grass Roots, from the album Let's Live for Today "Out of Touch", by Lucinda Williams, from the album Essence
Released in late 1984, the first single from the LP, "Out of Touch", became the group's sixth number 1 hit on December 8, 1984. "Method of Modern Love", which debuted on the pop charts while "Out of Touch" was at number 1, reached number 5 in February 1985. "Some Things Are Better Left Unsaid" reached number 18, and "Possession Obsession" (a ...
The album was released on September 13, 2005. [3] The album debuted at number 14 on the Billboard 200 chart, with approximatively 61,400 copies sold. [4] Three singles were released: "Stand Up", "Waiting", and "Disconnected (Out of Touch)".
In 1995, after the demise of the band, a disillusioned Stag went back to Pittsburgh and immersed himself in the blues, to get back in touch with the source of his inspiration. Steier and Kottak went back to Kentucky and assembled the short-lived Wild Horses , who released an album on Atlantic Records .