Celebrating its thirtieth anniversary today (March 8th) is Just a Little Love, the seventh studio album from American country singer and guitarist Reba McEntire. It peaked at number 23 on the US Billboard Country chart in 1984.
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Showing posts with label David Hungate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Hungate. Show all posts
Saturday, March 8, 2014
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Olivia Newton-John - Totally Hot
Welcome to another edition of Seventies Sunday.
Today, in honor of its thirty-fifth anniversary this month, we are giving a listen to the 1978 release Totally Hot. This was the tenth studio album for Australian-born singer Olivia Newton-John. The Platinum selling record went to number 30 in the UK, number 18 in New Zealand, number 9 in Japan, number 7 on the US Billboard Album chart, number 5 in Canada, and number 4 in Australia on the US Billboard Country chart.
Today, in honor of its thirty-fifth anniversary this month, we are giving a listen to the 1978 release Totally Hot. This was the tenth studio album for Australian-born singer Olivia Newton-John. The Platinum selling record went to number 30 in the UK, number 18 in New Zealand, number 9 in Japan, number 7 on the US Billboard Album chart, number 5 in Canada, and number 4 in Australia on the US Billboard Country chart.
Labels:
70's,
Chuck Findley,
David Foster,
David Hungate,
Ed Greene,
Gerald Peterson,
Jai Winding,
John Farrar,
Lenny Castro,
Michael Boddicker,
Mike Botts,
music,
Olivia Newton-John,
Steve Lukather,
Totally Hot
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Toto - Toto IV
Today (April 8th) marks the 30th anniversary of the fourth studio album from the California rock band Toto.
After a cooled reception to 1981’s Turn Back, 1982’s Toto IV put the group back on the charts. The album easily broke the top twenty in all markets; it was number 17 in Sweden, number 16 in France, number 12 in Germany and Finland, number 9 in New Zealand, number 4 in the UK and the US Billboard Hot 200, number 3 in Japan, number 2 in Norway and number 1 in the Netherlands. The record also scored the group their first number 1 single.
After a cooled reception to 1981’s Turn Back, 1982’s Toto IV put the group back on the charts. The album easily broke the top twenty in all markets; it was number 17 in Sweden, number 16 in France, number 12 in Germany and Finland, number 9 in New Zealand, number 4 in the UK and the US Billboard Hot 200, number 3 in Japan, number 2 in Norway and number 1 in the Netherlands. The record also scored the group their first number 1 single.
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