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"Hands to Heaven" is a ballad by English new wave band Breathe, taken from their debut studio album, All That Jazz (1987). The song released as their fifth UK single on 20 October 1987 by A&M Records and as the band's second single in the US the following year.
In America, "Hands To Heaven" debuted on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart on 20 February 1988. With repeated rotation of the music video on VH1, "Hands To Heaven" crept onto the Billboard Hot 100 at #90 on 16 April and drifted about the lower regions of the chart for the following two months until it finally broke into the Top 40 in June. [1]
All That Jazz is the debut studio album by English pop band Breathe.Originally scheduled for release in October 1987, the album was issued first in the United States on 24 August 1987, ahead of the United Kingdom and other markets.
The cover art, depicting Schaff's severed hands, [18] was repurposed from Notes to a Friend; Silently Listening No. 2 by John Arthur Tinholt. [25] Lift Your Skinny Fists like Antennas to Heaven entered into the UK charts, run by the Official Charts Company, on the week of 21 October 2000.
was the third single from the album, following "Hands to Heaven" and the UK-only release "Jonah". The song was successful in the United States where it peaked at #3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #1 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart.
After his stint as a contestant on ABS-CBN's Star in a Million talent contest where he became the fourth runner-up, Bautista signed an album contract with Warner Music Philippines. [7]
This is a set category.It should only contain pages that are Breathe (British band) songs or lists of Breathe (British band) songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories).
"Hands to Heaven [Remix]" - 4:18 [1] The Limited edition CD single included a bonus set of three band members portraits housed inside a slim video style box with picture insert. All songs written by David Glasper and Marcus Lillington, except "Say Hello" written by David Glasper and Francis White.