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  1. The uptempo track, featuring a solo from Queen guitarist Brian May, became their second UK top ten hit, peaking at No. 10. The planned follow-up, "Gatecrashing" was halted suddenly when the Hillsborough disaster happened in the band's hometown.

  2. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1989 Vinyl release of "Gatecrashing" on Discogs.

    • (21)
    • Germany
    • 44
    • Vinyl, LP, Album
  3. Puttin' on the Style. 1980. Quartz. "Circles" (recorded 1977) B-side of the single "Stoking the Fires of Hell" (1980); also bonus track on the 2004 reissue of the album Stand Up and Fight. 1983. Jeffrey Osborne. "Stay with Me Tonight", "Two Wrongs Don't Make a Right". Stay with Me Tonight.

    Year Of Release
    Collaborated With
    Song
    Album/record
    1975
    "Man from Manhattan"
    Man from Manhattan
    1976
    "You Nearly Did Me In"
    All-American Alien Boy
    1978
    "Digging My Potatoes"
    Puttin' on the Style
    1980
    "Circles" (recorded 1977)
    B-side of the single "Stoking the Fires ...
  4. 1989 erschien mit Gatecrashing das zweite Album der Band, auf dem mit Blow the House Down und Room in Your Heart zwei weitere UK-Top-Ten-Hits enthalten sind. Brian May war hier als Gastmusiker beteiligt.

  5. "Room in Your Heart" is the third single from the British group Living in a Box's 1989 album, Gatecrashing. It rivalled the band's eponymous 1987 single as their highest-charting song. Both peaked at No. 5 on the UK Singles Chart .

  6. The uptempo track, featuring a solo from Queen guitarist Brian May, became their second UK top ten hit, peaking at No.10. They followed this up with the less-successful "Gatecrashing" which peaked at No.36 alongside the release of this album. Produced by Tom… Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue ...

  7. 19. Jan. 2015 · Gatecrashing (Diesel Mix) is up first, and this heavily samples the original vocals, all remixed by Tom Lord Alge. This version probably takes this song closer to Peter Gabriel‘s hit Sledgehammer. It does also have an air of Stock/Aitken/Waterman about it, even though that’s coincidental.