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Seven is the seventh studio album by American rock band Winger. It marks the return of guitarist/keyboardist Paul Taylor to the band since 1990's In the Heart of the Young. The album was preceded by the lead single "Proud Desperado". [2] The band toured in the UK in May and the US in June 2023 in support of the album. [2]
The Very Best of Winger is a compilation album of material from the American rock band Winger, released by the label Atlantic Records and the company Rhino Entertainment in October 2001. [ 1 ] Most of the songs on the album were collected from the first three Winger studio albums: Winger (1988), In the Heart of the Young (1990) and Pull (1993).
Album US [4] US Main [5] UK [6] 1988 "Madalaine" — 27 — Winger: 1989 "Seventeen" 26 19 — "Headed for a Heartbreak" 19 8 — "Hungry" 85 34 — 1990 "Can't Get Enuff" 42 6 — In the Heart of the Young "Miles Away" 12 14 56 1991 "Easy Come Easy Go" 41 20 — 1993 "Down Incognito" — 15 — Pull "—" denotes releases that did not chart
Kip Winger was inspired to do this after performing solo shows at U.S. military bases, and being touched by the stories of the soldiers he met. The album cover, showing a U.S. soldier being watched over by angels, was drawn by comic book artist Ethan Van Sciver, known for his work at DC and Marvel Comics. Kip Winger was introduced to Van Sciver ...
Winger then composed C.F. Kip Winger: Conversations With Nijinsky, which was recorded by the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra; that album went to No. 1 on the Billboard Traditional Classical Chart ...
Winger followed the release of its second album with a 13-month world tour, playing over 230 dates with Kiss, Scorpions, ZZ Top, Extreme and Slaughter. Paul Taylor left the band after the tour, citing exhaustion after years of touring. [10] Their third studio album, Pull, produced by Mike Shipley, was recorded in 1992/1993 as a three-piece band ...
The name "Sahara" appears in the lower right hand section of the album cover. The band initially wanted to call themselves "Sahara", but that name was taken by another band at the time. Though they ultimately chose the name Winger , "Sahara" remained on the cover.
Self-consciously nerdy in an era of scuzzy post-grunge bluster, 1994's crisp and witty "Weezer" — soon to be known as the Blue Album because of its cover (and the fact that the band kept naming ...