Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. The Essential Eddie Money is a 2003 compilation album of hits from American rock singer Eddie Money, released as part of Sony BMG's Essential series. The album includes 15 tracks from Eddie Money's eight studio albums and one greatest hits album.

    No.
    Title
    Writer (s)
    Album
    1.
    Eddie Money (1977)
    2.
    Eddie Money, James Lyon
    Eddie Money (1977)
    3.
    "Wanna Be A Rock 'N' Roll Star"
    Eddie Money, Chris Solberg
    Eddie Money (1977)
    4.
    "Gimme Some Water"
    Eddie Money
    • The Ronettes, “Be My Baby”
    • The Ronettes, “Baby, I Love You”
    • The Ronettes, “Sleigh Ride”
    • The Ronettes, “So Young”
    • The Ronettes, “Walking in The Rain”
    • The Ronettes, “Why Don’T They Let Us Fall in Love”
    • The Ronettes, “
    • The Ronettes, “Do I Love You?”
    • The Ronettes, “I Can Hear Music”
    • “Try Some, Buy Some”

    Thump, thump-thump, clap! From the unforgettable opening drumbeat to Ronnie Spector’s roller-coaster “whoa-oa-oas” over a Wall of Sound built on orchestral strings and castanets, “Be My Baby” was an instant classic. “It was like I’d gone to heaven,” Spector once recalledof Hal Blaine’s drum intro. “It all fit. It all was like a puzzle and once my v...

    There’s nothing quite like the rush of hearing the Ronettes’ “Baby, I Love You” slide into its chorus: It’s the thrill of young hearts (and hormones) colliding feverishly and a backbeat powerful enough to drown out any doubts. Written by Phil Spector with Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich, “Baby, I Love You” was released in 1963 as the follow-up to “B...

    It’s not really the holidays until Ronnie Spector welcomes it with “Sleigh Ride,” an upbeat Andrews Sisters cover that appeared on a Phil Spector–produced Christmas sampler in 1963, and just last year became the Ronettes’ highest-charting hit. Cue the bells, cue the whinnying horse, cue the rock & roll buildup — then Ronnie bursts in, with her smok...

    “So Young” plays as a downcast follow-up to the giddy rush of “Be My Baby” — the fictional couple gets together, only to have their love dismissed by the short-sighted adults who still rule their lives. “They say our love is just a teenage affection,” Spector pouts, before turning defiant: “But no one knows my heart’s direction.” “I’m So Young” was...

    After a trip to London, Spector mentioned to husband-and-wife songwriting team Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil how entranced she was by her time in the city. “I told them I loved the English rain and fog,” she recalled. Building on that image, the pair came up with this dreamy ballad — a perfect mix of teenage romantic fantasy and wearily searching lon...

    Love is a battlefield — or at least a subject of mockery, much to Spector’s frustration — in this track: “Why do they always try to keep us apart?” she wonders. “Why do they laugh at what I feel in my heart?” Spector never identifies the dastardly forces standing between her and the object of her affections. But the track beneath her pushes back ag...

    “(The Best Part of) Breakin’ Up” marked another Top 40 hit off the Ronettes lone LP, Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes Featuring Veronica. The track was arranged by studio wizard Jack Nitzsche and co-written by Brill Building vets Pete Anders and Vince Poncia withPhil Spector — who, as legend goes, knew the song would be a hit after he was presented...

    Ronnie Spector is relentless to the point of recklessness in “Do I Love You?” — a series of romantic questions (the implied answer to each is, of course, an emphatic yes) that escalates at breakneck speed. She starts with a few softballs: “Do I want you for my baby?” “Do I want to run and kiss your lips?” But it doesn’t take long for her to ratchet...

    Composed especially for the Ronettes from the Jeff Barry/Ellie Greenwich/Phil Spector girl-group blueprint, “I Can Hear Music” wasn’t a major hit for the band upon its release in 1966. Rather, it was the Beach Boys’ version three years later — with angelic lead vocals from Carl Wilson — that’s best remembered. But listening to the Ronettes’ origina...

    In 1971, a few years after interest in the Ronettes had dried up and a year before Ronnie would escape the clutches of Phil Spector, Ronnie’s Beatles buddy George Harrison helped revive her career by giving her “Try Some, Buy Some,” a leftover from his All Things Must Pass sessions. The tune is more pensive and plodding (and therefore more George H...

    • Jon Dolan
  2. 13. Jan. 2022 · Ronnie Spector helped turn Eddie Money's 1986 song Take Me Home Tonight into his biggest hit.

  3. Album, Stereo, Mono. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2003 CD release of "The Essential Eddie Money" on Discogs.

  4. "Take Me Home Tonight" is a song by American rock singer Eddie Money. It was released in August 1986 as the lead single from his album Can't Hold Back. The song's chorus interpolates the Ronettes' 1963 hit "Be My Baby", with original vocalist Ronnie Spector providing uncredited vocals and reprising her role. Songwriting credit was ...

  5. Ronnie Spector war eine US-amerikanische Sängerin. Sie wurde als Leadsängerin der Girlgroup The Ronettes bekannt und war auch als Solosängerin sowie in Zusammenarbeit mit anderen Musikern erfolgreich.

  6. Eddie and Ronnie also discuss how their hit collaboration came to be. (From "Late Night," air date: 10/9/86)#eddiemoney #ronniespector #letterman Subscribe to...

    • 7 Min.
    • 615,1K
    • Letterman