

Pure period disco, with soaring strings, chukka-chukka guitar, and all the right bells and whistles, it must be confessed that it has some charm. This, her 1976 debut album, was titled for the positively enormous number one hit that launched that sequence. In the mid-'70s, Tina Charles was certainly the reigning queen of such creations, a sub-disco pop diva who, though she never dented a chart stateside, took six singles into her native Top 30.

Of all British rock's least enviable exports, the national predilection for faceless pop stars - light of ideas, big on gimmicks, and short of substance - has always baffled Anglophiles, even as the Anglos themselves send them rocketing chartwards. “I want you for always, I hear your name in every word I say.Téléchargez cet album dans la qualité de votre choix Acheter l’album À partir de 14,89€ One the best love songs the band has ever written. I love the lyrics, the way Taylor sings the song, Isaac’s part in the bridge and the overall huge sound of the song. I’ve seen a lot of the other fans making their own lists to share, so I thought I would do the same – it is much tougher than you’d imagine because it’s really incredibly hard to rank certain songs above each other. Some of their best work is on the fan club member CDs or tracks that “don’t exist” as Zac put it when I asked him once to play an obscure non-album track. I took the survey but it really wasn’t complete because they only listed tracks on their studio albums.

I don’t know when the new album will come out (hopefully this year), so it may get revised again.īack in 2016, Hanson asked fan club members to select their Top 25 favorite songs in honor of the 20th anniversary (and their 25th anniversary as a band together). Updated (2021)! It’s been five years since I compiled this list and some of the links were broken, a few new songs have come out and I decided to re-work it a little bit.
