Maureen McGovern (album)
1979 studio album by Maureen McGovern / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Maureen McGovern is Maureen McGovern's fourth studio album (and her first in four years), released in 1979 on Curb Records.[1] It reached #162 on the Billboard Hot 200 list of popular albums.
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Maureen McGovern | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1979 | |||
Genre | Pop | |||
Label | Warner Bros./Curb | |||
Producer | Michael Lloyd | |||
Maureen McGovern chronology | ||||
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This album contains McGovern's movie theme ("Can You Read My Mind," the love theme from the 1978 film Superman) and "Different Worlds," the theme from the TV series Angie, which peaked at #1 for two weeks on the Adult Contemporary chart and #18 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1979.[2][3] It shows a new image that McGovern created for herself; she had her long blonde hair cut short and dyed it brown (she would change her image a few more times over the years, particularly during the 1980s). It was also McGovern's last album to concentrate on pop music and movie themes, as she would soon quit this work to begin a career on Broadway; she returned to the music industry a few years later as a singer of standards and showtunes.
Cover versions include Frankie Valli's "Can't Take My Eyes Off You," the Beatles' "I'm Happy Just to Dance with You," the Crystals' hit "He's a Rebel" (written by Gene Pitney), Barbara Mason's "Yes, I'm Ready", and the standard "Carolina Moon". (In 1980, McGovern continued to record for Curb Records, releasing the singles "We Could Have It All," which reached #16 on the U.S. AC charts and #6 on the Canadian AC charts,[4] as well as "Bottom Line," but no follow-up album on Curb was ever released.)
In 1990, Curb Records released this album on CD, but replaced the fan favorite album cut "Life's a Long Way To Run" with the hit "The Morning After" and re-titled the CD "Greatest Hits".