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"Telefone (Long Distance Love Affair)" is a song by Scottish singer Sheena Easton, released as the first single from her fourth album, 1983's Best Kept Secret. In November 1984, Easton added "Telefono" to her Spanish album Todo Me Recuerda a Ti for the Latin markets. The song was nominated for a Grammy in 1983 for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.
"Strut" is a song by Scottish singer Sheena Easton for her fifth studio album, A Private Heaven (1984). It was composed by singer-songwriter Charlie Dore and her longtime songwriting partner Julian Littman. [2] Easton was sent the demo for the song by Christopher Neil, who was Easton's first producer. [3] "
A Private Heaven is the fifth studio album by Scottish pop singer Sheena Easton, released on 21 September 1984 by EMI America Records.The album featured two US Top 10 hit singles: the lead single "Strut" and the controversial "Sugar Walls".
Easton's first three US albums, Sheena Easton (1981) (retitled edition of Take My Time), You Could Have Been with Me (1981), and Madness, Money & Music (1982), were all in the same soft rock/pop vein. [citation needed] The title track from You Could Have Been with Me made it in to the US top 15; however, by the end of 1982, she saw her sales ...
The following is a list of the comprehensive discography of Scottish singer Sheena Easton that consists of fifteen studio albums and sixteen compilation albums. Easton released her debut album, Take My Time, in 1980, and the single "Morning Train (9 to 5)" reached number 12 on the Billboard Year-End Hot 100 in 1981.
Performed by then 21-year-old Scottish singer Sheena Easton, and written by composer Bill Conti and lyricis First, it was the grittiest and most realistic Bond adventure since “From Russia with ...
It should only contain pages that are Sheena Easton songs or lists of Sheena Easton songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Sheena Easton songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Easton re-recorded the song ("El Primer Tren") for her Spanish-language album Todo Me Recuerda a Tí, in 1983 for the Latin markets. [citation needed]Swedish-born Norwegian singer Elisabeth Andreassen covered the song in Swedish, as "Han pendlar varje dag" ("He commutes every day") with the new lyrics by Olle Bergman, on her 1981 album Angel of the Morning. [26]