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Evie Sands (born July 18, 1946) is an American singer, songwriter and musician. Sands' music career spans more than 50 years. In the mid-1960s, while still a teenager, she began her career and eventually found chart success in 1969.
"Angel of the Morning" is a popular song written by Chip Taylor, originally recorded by Evie Sands but which first charted with a version by Merrilee Rush. The song has been covered by many artists including Chrissie Hynde , Dusty Springfield , P. P. Arnold , Connie Eaton , Mary Mason , Guys 'n' Dolls , Melba Montgomery , Olivia Newton-John and ...
"I Can't Let Go" is a song co-written by Al Gorgoni and Chip Taylor, who also wrote "Wild Thing". "I Can't Let Go" was originally recorded by the blue-eyed soul singer Evie Sands on George Goldner's Blue Cat label, which was popular in New York City in 1965. [2]
With his old friend Evie Sands, Billy recorded "Queen of Diamonds/Jack of Hearts", a CD featuring songs by their early mentor Chip Taylor. [citation needed] In 2015, Vera released Billy Vera: Big Band Jazz with arrangements by Chris Walden, a tribute to the black songwriters of the 1920s, 30s and 40s. It was issued on Varese-Sarabande Records ...
The single's success briefly boosted its parent album Hot on to the charts with a #125 peak, and two other tracks released as singles appeared in the lower half of the Hot 100: "Right Feeling at the Wrong Time" and "You Brought the Woman Out of Me" (the latter a minor hit for Evie Sands in 1975).
In 1974, they formed their own record label, Haven Records, distributed by Capitol Records, with a roster that included the Righteous Brothers, the Grass Roots, Evie Sands [6] and Player. During this period, they also wrote and produced albums for Tavares and Glen Campbell on Capitol.
Evie Sands, Richard Germinaro, Ben Weisman: 4:11: 4. "You Gotta Tell Her" Van McCoy: 3:37: 5. ... Linda at Discogs (list of releases) This page was last ...
In July 1969, American singer Evie Sands released a cover of the song as a single from her album Any Way That You Want Me. It peaked at number 53 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 40 on the RPM chart and number 85 on the retrospective Australian Kent Music Report chart. [23] [27] [28]