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Touch Me in the Morning: Expanded Edition, released in January 2010, includes a newly remastered version of the original album plus previously unreleased mixes and alternate versions as well as two songs recorded during the same timeline: "Kewpie Doll", written and co-produced by Smokey Robinson, and "When We Grow Up", from Marlo Thomas' 1972 album Free to Be...You and Me.
Kelly / ˈ k ɛ l i / is a unisex given name derived from an Anglicized version of the Irish masculine name Ceallach or a transferred use of the Irish surname O'Ceallaigh. O'Ceallaigh, which means "descendant of Ceallach", was Anglicized as Kelly or O'Kelly. [1] The meaning of the personal name Ceallach is uncertain.
The album was released on November 8, 1993, in the United Kingdom on the 4AD imprint Guernica, and on March 1, 1994, in the United States on DGC Records. Several of the album's tracks had previously been issued on the EP that dog. on Magnatone Products, released earlier in 1993.
The lyrics to "The Black Dog" from Taylor Swift's new album Tortured Poets Department leaked ahead its release. "The Black Dog" isn't a canine, but a bar where she and (likely) Alwyn would ...
7 Wishes is the third studio album by the American hard rock band Night Ranger, released in 1985 and produced by Pat Glasser.The album features three Billboard Hot 100 chart hits: "Sentimental Street" reached No. 8, "Four in the Morning" No. 19 and "Goodbye" No. 17.
Izitso is the tenth studio album by the British singer-songwriter Cat Stevens, released in April 1977.After the lacklustre Numbers, the album proved to be his comeback.The album updated the rhythmic folk rock and pop rock style of his earlier albums with the extensive use of synthesizers [2] and other electronic music instruments, giving the album a more electronic rock and synthpop style, and ...
"Touch Me in the Morning" is a song recorded by Diana Ross on the Motown label. It was written by Ron Miller and Michael Masser, and produced by the latter and Tom Baird. It was released on May 3, 1973 as the first single from her album of the same name. In 1973, it became Ross's second solo No. 1 single on the Billboard Hot 100.
[8] [9] The album spawned the singles "Straight On" and "Dog & Butterfly". As Heart themselves noted on the album's release, side one was the Dog side, and was the more "rocking" compared to the Butterfly side two, which consisted mostly of ballads, with the exception of the closer "Mistral Wind".