A very fun and sexy reaction 👁👙👁! Dennis Locorriere is the lead singer. Sexy Eyes was released as the second single from Dr Hook's 1979 album: Sometimes You Win. It was written by Chris Waters, Keith Stegall and Bob Mather. It was produced by Ron Haffkine. The song reached #5 on the Hot 100, #6 on the Adult Contemporary chart and #67 on the R&B chart. The single sold five hundred thousand copies and was certified Gold. This performance is from the Dutch TV show: TopPop, on February 16, 1980. The lyrics of “Sexy Eyes” are about the singer’s affection for a woman with stunning and captivating eyes. He describes her eyes as: “arrows through my heart”, and how they “arrest my soul each time”. The song’s narrator is entranced by the beauty of this woman’s eyes, and they seem to have a hypnotic power over him. The song also describes the sultry and seductive nature of the woman who possesses these mesmerizing eyes. The lines: “She gets me in a trance, I take a chance when I see”, describe how the woman’s beauty has left the singer completely powerless in her presence. Despite the hold that the woman has over him, he admits that he can’t resist her and is completely in awe of her charm. The song was written during the 1970s, the decade famous for its free love culture and sexually liberated attitude. It was a time when sexuality was being explored and expressed in music, media, and society. The song reflects the power that physical attraction can have over a person and how it can leave one powerless to resist. The song was a conscious effort by the band to move away from their previous Country-inspired songs. Dr Hook wanted to create a different sound, and this song helped to achieve that goal. The combination of Pop, Rock, and Soul sounds brought a new audience to the band and helped to solidify their place in the music industry. The song has been covered by some artists including 📻: Tom Jones, Harlem Yu, Kai Warner, Deanie Ip, Rozalin Woods, Try 'N' B, Siw Inger, Arto Nuotio and more. Lyrics 🗒: I was sitting all alone Watching people get it on with each other They were dancing 'cross the floor Turning moving back and forth They were lovers One more lonely night for me I looked up what did I see Sexy eyes Moving 'cross the floor Got me wanting more Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Getting down on you I wanna move with you Sexy eyes I got up and took your hand And we both began to dance to the music Ooh, your magic cast a spell It didn't take long till we fell And we knew it No more lonely nights for me This is how it's gonna be Sexy eyes Moving 'cross the floor Got me wanting more Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Getting down with you I wanna move with you Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Moving 'cross the floor Got me wanting more Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Getting down with you I wanna move with you Sexy eyes No more lonely nights for me This is how it's gonna be Sexy eyes Moving 'cross the floor Got me wanting more Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Getting down on you I wanna move with you Sexy eyes Ooh, sexy eyes Getting down with you I wanna move with you Sexy eyes Sexy eyes Getting down with you I wanna move with you Sexy eyes... Dr Hook & The Medicine Show Info 📰: Dr Hook & The Medicine Show, shortened to Dr Hook in 1975, is a Rock band, formed in Union City, New Jersey. The founding core of the band consisted of George Cummings, Ray Sawyer, and Billy Francis, who had worked together in a band called: The Chocolate Papers. George Cummings, Ray Sawyer and Billy Francis started a new band and included primary vocalist Dennis Locorriere, who initially joined as a bass player. The new band was named: "Dr Hook And The Medicine Show: Tonic For The Soul". The name was inspired by Ray Sawyer's eyepatch and a reference to Captain Hook of the Peter Pan fairy tale. Ray Sawyer lost his right eye in a near-fatal car crash in Oregon in 1967 and, after that, wore an eyepatch, leading some people to believe that he was Dr Hook, when asked by fans which band member was Dr Hook, they would all point to the bus driver. The band played in New Jersey, first with drummer Popeye Phillips, who had also been in The Chocolate Papers. Popeye Phillips left the band to become a session musician, contributing to the first album by The Flying Burrito Brothers. Drummer Joseph Olivier replaced him. When the band began recording its first album, Joseph Olivier was replaced by session player John "Jay" David, who became a band member in 1968. In 1970, the band's demo tapes were heard by Ron Haffkine, who was the music producer for the 1971 film: Who Is Harry Kellerman And Why Is He Saying Those Terrible Things About Me?. Ron Haffkine asked the band to record two songs for the film, including: "The Last Morning" and "Bunky And Lucille", which the band can be seen performing in the movie. The film helped Dr Hook & The Medicine Show secure their first recording contract. The group met with Clive Davis of CBS Records. John "Jay" David used a wastebasket in the meeting to keep the beat, and Billy Francis danced on the mogul's desk while Ray Sawyer, Dennis Locorriere, and George Cummings played and sang. With the CBS Records deal, the band experienced international success over the next 12 years with Ron Haffkine as the group's manager and music producer. The band had commercial success in the 1970s with hit singles: "Sylvia's Mother" (#5 Pop 1972), "The Cover Of Rolling Stone" (#6 Pop 1972), "Only Sixteen" (#6 Pop 1975), "A Little Bit More" (#11 Pop 1976), "Sharing The Night Together" (#6 Pop 1978), "When You're in Love With A Beautiful Woman" (#6 Pop 1979), "Better Love Next Time" (#12 Pop 1979), and "Sexy Eyes" (#6 Pop 1980). In addition to its own material, Dr Hook & T Medicine Show performed songs written by the poet Shel Silverstein. The band had eight years of hits in the United States. Its music, spanning novelty songs, acoustic ballads, and Soft Rock, was played on Top 40, Easy Listening, and Country music radio stations throughout the English-speaking world. Ray Sawyer left the band in 1983 to pursue a solo career, while the band continued to tour for another couple of years, ending with Dr Hook's One And Only Farewell Tour in 1985, with Dennis Locorriere as the band's sole front-man. After Dr Hook split up, Dennis Locorriere retained ownership of the band's name. However, from 1988 to 2015, Ray Sawyer was granted a license to tour separately as "Ray Sawyer Of Dr Hook" or "Dr Hook Featuring Ray Sawyer". He was joined for a time in 2001 by Billy Francis. In the spring of 2004, George Cummings old band: The Flares, were reborn in Lebanon, Tennessee when George Cummings joined original members Jim Pasquale (guitar) and Norman "Knobby" Lowell (drums), along with Nashville singer-songwriters Scotty Cothran, Harold Hutchcraft, Jack Bond, and Forest Borders, to cut the comeback album: It Is What It Is. After the original band split, Dennis Locorriere released several solo albums and toured under the names "Voice Of Dr Hook" and "Dennis Locorriere Celebrates Dr Hook Hits And History Tour". Now fronting the band Dr Hook starring Dennis Locorriere, he started the "Dr Hook 50th Anniversary World Tour" in 2019, but this was postponed due to Dennis Locorriere undergoing a prostate procedure resulting in kidney problems. The band resumed their 50th Anniversary Tour on September 3, 2021, with a show at Manchester's Bridgewater Hall and with performances scheduled for Scandinavia, the UK, and Ireland in 2022. In 2024, Dennis Locorriere's version of Dr Hook is made up of John Maher, Michelle Cordelli, Damien Cooper, Tim Bye, Jon Poole, and Ryan Farmery. Dr Hook & The Medicine Show Group Members Who Passed Away 🙏: 1. Jance Garfat (March 3, 1944 - November 6, 2006) Jance Garfat succumbed to injuries sustained in a motorcycle accident in San Francisco, California. No info on his funeral or burial available. 2. John Wolters ( April 28, 1945 - June 16, 1977) John Wolters passed away on June 16, 1997, at age 52, from liver cancer, in San Francisco, California. His body was cremated and the ashes given to his family. 3. Billy Francis (January 1, 1942 - May 23, 2010) Billy Francis passed away on May 23, 2010, at age 68, in Glenwood Healthcare in Seymour, Missouri. He was laid to rest at Johnson Creek Cemetery in Greene County, Mississippi. 4. Rod Smarr (1947 - June 15, 2012) John Roderick "Rod" Smarr passed away on June 15, 2012 in Nashville, Tennessee, at age 65. A memorial service was held on June 23rd at the Chapel at Woodmont Baptist Church. No ifo on his burial is available. 5. Ray Sawyer (February 1, 1937 - December 31, 2018) Ray Sawyer, after a dealing with an undisclosed health issue, passed away on December 31, 2018, in Daytona Beach, Florida, at the age of 81. No Info on his funeral or burial available. 6. Bob "Willard" Henke (April 29, 1951- February 3, 2023) Bob "Willard" Henke passed away on February 2, 2023, at the age of 71, in Phoenix, Arizona, from an undisclosed illness. No info on his funeral or burial available. Dr Hook & The Medicine Show Group Members (*Original Member): *Dennis Locorriere - vocals, guitar, bass, harmonica (1968-1985, 2019-present) *Ray Sawyer - vocals, guitar, percussion, congas, maracas (1967-1983, 1988-2015) *Billy Francis - keyboards, vocals (1968-1985, 2001-2010) *George Cummings - lead and steel guitars, vocals (1968-1975) John "Jay" David - drums (1968-1973) Rik Elswit - guitar (1972-1985) Jance Garfat - bass (1972-1985) John Wolters - drums (1973-1982, 1983-1985) Bob 'Willard' Henke - guitar, keyboards (1976-1980) Rod Smarr - guitar (1980-1985) Walter Hartman - drums (1982-1983) Leonard Wolfe - keyboards (1983-1985) *Joseph Olivier - drums (1968) ****CONTINUE BELOW****
Dr Hook & The Medicine Show Albums 📀: Doctor Hook (1972) Sloppy Seconds (1972) Belly Up! (1973) Bankrupt! (1975) A Little Bit More (1976) Makin' Love And Music (1977) Pleasure And Pain (1978) Sometimes You Win (1979) Rising (1980) Live In The UK aka Dr Hook Live (1981) Players In The Dark (1982) Let Me Drink From Your Well (1983) George Cummings Albums 📀: It Is What It Is w/ The Flares (2004) Ray Sawyer Albums 📀: Ray Sawyer (1976) A Little Bit More (1996) Dennis Locorriere Albums 📀: Out Of The Dark (2000) Alone with... (2002) Live In Liverpool (2004) One Of The Lucky Ones (2005) Post Cool (2010) Post Cool Live (2011) The Voice Of Dr Hook (2021) Some more good songs by Dr Hook & The Medicine Show 🎶: Sylvia's Mother, The Cover Of Rolling Stone, Only Sixteen, A Little Bit More, Sharing The Night Together, The Radio, Clyde, When You're In Love With A Beautiful Woman, The Ballad Of Lucy Jordan, Baby Makes Her Blue Jeans Talk, Lady Sundown, Queen Of The Silver Dollar, I Can't Say No To Her, The Turn On, Pity The Fool, Walk Right In, Chained To Her Memory, Devil's Daughter, Marie Lavaux, Sing Me A Rainbow, Hey Lady Godiva, Four Years Older Than Me, Kiss It Away, Makin' It Natural, When She Cries, Judy, Mama, I'll Sing One Song For You, Hearts Like Yours And Mine, Girls Can Get It, Blown Away, Lucky Night, S.O.S. For Love, Doin' It, Hold Me Like You Never Had Me, Beware Of Lovers, Do You Right Tonight, 99 And Me, Before The Tears, I Couldn't Believe, Feels Good, I'll Kill You, Making Love And Music, Drinking Wine Alone, You've Heard It All Before, The Ugliest Man In Town, Michelangelo, Got That Feeling, Yours & Mine, Angela's Eyes, Laying Too Low Too Long, What A Way To Go, That Didn't Hurt Too Bad, Sleeping Late, Walk Right In, Let The Loose End Drag, I'm A Lamb, Who Dat, Sexy Energy, Dooley Jones, I Wanna Make The Women Tremble, In Over My Head, Storms Never Last, All The Time In The World, I Don't Want To Be Alone Tonight, Knowing She's There, I Gave Her Comfort, You Make My Pants Want To Get Up And Dance, Years From Now, I Need To Love Again, I Got Stoned And Missed It, Let Me Be Your Lover, The Millionaire, Cooky And Lila, Wups, The Wonderful Soup Stone, Everybody's Making It Big But Me, Do Downs, Everybody Loves Me, On The Way To The Bottom, Bubblin' Up, If Not You, Bad Eye Bill, Up On The Mountain, Jungle To The Zoo, More Like The Movies, What About You, I Need The High, A Couple More Years, Better Love Next Time, Years From Now, I Don't Feel Much Like Smilin', What Do You Want?, Love Monster, Oh! Jesse, Stop Teasing My Heart, Mountain Mary, Let Me Drink From Your Well, Carry Me Carrie, Animal Instinct, Loveline, Don't Play That Song, Roland The Roadie And Gertrude The Groupie, Always Crying Over You, When You're 18, Boy Talk, Rings, Missing You Takes Up Most Of My Time, Strings, The Wild Colonial Boy, Life Ain't Easy, Crazy Rosie, The Things I Didn't Say, Cops And Robbers, Sweetest Of All, I Call That True Love, Fire In The Night, Levitate, Help Me Mama, Freakin' At The Freaker's Ball, If I'd Only Come And Gone, Penicillin Penny, When Lily Was Queen, Ballad Of..., Monterey Jack, Acapulco Goldie, You Ain't Got The Right, Put A Little Bit On Me, Get My Rocks Off, I Can't Touch The Sun, Bunky And Lucille, Come On In, Stayin' Song, Body Talkin', Rings Of Grass, I'll Put Angels Around You, Last Morning, Bonus Record and The Stimu. Fun Fact 🕵: In 1996, German singer Bürger Lars Dietrich covered the song: "Sexy Eyes", under the title: "Sexy Eis".
Some reactions to consider 🤔: Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five- It's Nasty (Genius Of Love) (Official Music Video), Patsy Cline- Crazy Live (DiscoBar 80 YT channel) or Run DMC- Rock Box (Official Video).
They have great music!! This is one of my favorites!!!❤❤❤❤
Great song and reaction
They were a great band...I loved all of their songs.
You seem like such a happy person, your what everyone should be like 😉
🙏
When You're In Love With A Beautiful Woman.
Cover Of The Rolling Stone.
I saw this group so many times. They're awesome.
Suggestions from Dr Hook: Sylvia's Mother!
A very fun and sexy reaction 👁👙👁! Dennis Locorriere is the lead singer. Sexy Eyes was released as the second single from Dr Hook's 1979 album: Sometimes You Win. It was written by Chris Waters, Keith Stegall and Bob Mather. It was produced by Ron Haffkine. The song reached #5 on the Hot 100, #6 on the Adult Contemporary chart and #67 on the R&B chart. The single sold five hundred thousand copies and was certified Gold. This performance is from the Dutch TV show: TopPop, on February 16, 1980.
The lyrics of “Sexy Eyes” are about the singer’s affection for a woman with stunning and captivating eyes. He describes her eyes as: “arrows through my heart”, and how they “arrest my soul each time”. The song’s narrator is entranced by the beauty of this woman’s eyes, and they seem to have a hypnotic power over him.
The song also describes the sultry and seductive nature of the woman who possesses these mesmerizing eyes. The lines: “She gets me in a trance, I take a chance when I see”, describe how the woman’s beauty has left the singer completely powerless in her presence. Despite the hold that the woman has over him, he admits that he can’t resist her and is completely in awe of her charm.
The song was written during the 1970s, the decade famous for its free love culture and sexually liberated attitude. It was a time when sexuality was being explored and expressed in music, media, and society. The song reflects the power that physical attraction can have over a person and how it can leave one powerless to resist. The song was a conscious effort by the band to move away from their previous Country-inspired songs. Dr Hook wanted to create a different sound, and this song helped to achieve that goal. The combination of Pop, Rock, and Soul sounds brought a new audience to the band and helped to solidify their place in the music industry.
The song has been covered by some artists including 📻: Tom Jones, Harlem Yu, Kai Warner, Deanie Ip, Rozalin Woods, Try 'N' B, Siw Inger, Arto Nuotio and more.
Lyrics 🗒:
I was sitting all alone
Watching people get it on with each other
They were dancing 'cross the floor
Turning moving back and forth
They were lovers
One more lonely night for me
I looked up what did I see
Sexy eyes
Moving 'cross the floor
Got me wanting more
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Getting down on you
I wanna move with you
Sexy eyes
I got up and took your hand
And we both began to dance to the music
Ooh, your magic cast a spell
It didn't take long till we fell
And we knew it
No more lonely nights for me
This is how it's gonna be
Sexy eyes
Moving 'cross the floor
Got me wanting more
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Getting down with you
I wanna move with you
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Moving 'cross the floor
Got me wanting more
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Getting down with you
I wanna move with you
Sexy eyes
No more lonely nights for me
This is how it's gonna be
Sexy eyes
Moving 'cross the floor
Got me wanting more
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Getting down on you
I wanna move with you
Sexy eyes
Ooh, sexy eyes
Getting down with you
I wanna move with you
Sexy eyes
Sexy eyes
Getting down with you
I wanna move with you
Sexy eyes...
Dr Hook & The Medicine Show Info 📰:
Dr Hook & The Medicine Show, shortened to Dr Hook in 1975, is a Rock band, formed in Union City, New Jersey. The founding core of the band consisted of George Cummings, Ray Sawyer, and Billy Francis, who had worked together in a band called: The Chocolate Papers. George Cummings, Ray Sawyer and Billy Francis started a new band and included primary vocalist Dennis Locorriere, who initially joined as a bass player. The new band was named: "Dr Hook And The Medicine Show: Tonic For The Soul". The name was inspired by Ray Sawyer's eyepatch and a reference to Captain Hook of the Peter Pan fairy tale. Ray Sawyer lost his right eye in a near-fatal car crash in Oregon in 1967 and, after that, wore an eyepatch, leading some people to believe that he was Dr Hook, when asked by fans which band member was Dr Hook, they would all point to the bus driver.
The band played in New Jersey, first with drummer Popeye Phillips, who had also been in The Chocolate Papers. Popeye Phillips left the band to become a session musician, contributing to the first album by The Flying Burrito Brothers. Drummer Joseph Olivier replaced him. When the band began recording its first album, Joseph Olivier was replaced by session player John "Jay" David, who became a band member in 1968.
In 1970, the band's demo tapes were heard by Ron Haffkine, who was the music producer for the 1971 film: Who Is Harry Kellerman And Why Is He Saying Those Terrible Things About Me?. Ron Haffkine asked the band to record two songs for the film, including: "The Last Morning" and "Bunky And Lucille", which the band can be seen performing in the movie. The film helped Dr Hook & The Medicine Show secure their first recording contract.
The group met with Clive Davis of CBS Records. John "Jay" David used a wastebasket in the meeting to keep the beat, and Billy Francis danced on the mogul's desk while Ray Sawyer, Dennis Locorriere, and George Cummings played and sang. With the CBS Records deal, the band experienced international success over the next 12 years with Ron Haffkine as the group's manager and music producer.
The band had commercial success in the 1970s with hit singles: "Sylvia's Mother" (#5 Pop 1972), "The Cover Of Rolling Stone" (#6 Pop 1972), "Only Sixteen" (#6 Pop 1975), "A Little Bit More" (#11 Pop 1976), "Sharing The Night Together" (#6 Pop 1978), "When You're in Love With A Beautiful Woman" (#6 Pop 1979), "Better Love Next Time" (#12 Pop 1979), and "Sexy Eyes" (#6 Pop 1980). In addition to its own material, Dr Hook & T Medicine Show performed songs written by the poet Shel Silverstein.
The band had eight years of hits in the United States. Its music, spanning novelty songs, acoustic ballads, and Soft Rock, was played on Top 40, Easy Listening, and Country music radio stations throughout the English-speaking world.
Ray Sawyer left the band in 1983 to pursue a solo career, while the band continued to tour for another couple of years, ending with Dr Hook's One And Only Farewell Tour in 1985, with Dennis Locorriere as the band's sole front-man.
After Dr Hook split up, Dennis Locorriere retained ownership of the band's name. However, from 1988 to 2015, Ray Sawyer was granted a license to tour separately as "Ray Sawyer Of Dr Hook" or "Dr Hook Featuring Ray Sawyer". He was joined for a time in 2001 by Billy Francis.
In the spring of 2004, George Cummings old band: The Flares, were reborn in Lebanon, Tennessee when George Cummings joined original members Jim Pasquale (guitar) and Norman "Knobby" Lowell (drums), along with Nashville singer-songwriters Scotty Cothran, Harold Hutchcraft, Jack Bond, and Forest Borders, to cut the comeback album: It Is What It Is.
After the original band split, Dennis Locorriere released several solo albums and toured under the names "Voice Of Dr Hook" and "Dennis Locorriere Celebrates Dr Hook Hits And History Tour". Now fronting the band Dr Hook starring Dennis Locorriere, he started the "Dr Hook 50th Anniversary World Tour" in 2019, but this was postponed due to Dennis Locorriere undergoing a prostate procedure resulting in kidney problems. The band resumed their 50th Anniversary Tour on September 3, 2021, with a show at Manchester's Bridgewater Hall and with performances scheduled for Scandinavia, the UK, and Ireland in 2022.
In 2024, Dennis Locorriere's version of Dr Hook is made up of John Maher, Michelle Cordelli, Damien Cooper, Tim Bye, Jon Poole, and Ryan Farmery.
Dr Hook & The Medicine Show Group Members Who Passed Away 🙏:
1. Jance Garfat (March 3, 1944 - November 6, 2006)
Jance Garfat succumbed to injuries sustained in a motorcycle accident in San Francisco, California. No info on his funeral or burial available.
2. John Wolters ( April 28, 1945 - June 16, 1977)
John Wolters passed away on June 16, 1997, at age 52, from liver cancer, in San Francisco, California. His body was cremated and the ashes given to his family.
3. Billy Francis (January 1, 1942 - May 23, 2010)
Billy Francis passed away on May 23, 2010, at age 68, in Glenwood Healthcare in Seymour, Missouri. He was laid to rest at Johnson Creek Cemetery in Greene County, Mississippi.
4. Rod Smarr (1947 - June 15, 2012)
John Roderick "Rod" Smarr passed away on June 15, 2012 in Nashville, Tennessee, at age 65. A memorial service was held on June 23rd at the Chapel at Woodmont Baptist Church. No ifo on his burial is available.
5. Ray Sawyer (February 1, 1937 - December 31, 2018)
Ray Sawyer, after a dealing with an undisclosed health issue, passed away on December 31, 2018, in Daytona Beach, Florida, at the age of 81. No Info on his funeral or burial available.
6. Bob "Willard" Henke (April 29, 1951- February 3, 2023)
Bob "Willard" Henke passed away on February 2, 2023, at the age of 71, in Phoenix, Arizona, from an undisclosed illness. No info on his funeral or burial available.
Dr Hook & The Medicine Show Group Members (*Original Member):
*Dennis Locorriere - vocals, guitar, bass, harmonica (1968-1985, 2019-present)
*Ray Sawyer - vocals, guitar, percussion, congas, maracas (1967-1983, 1988-2015)
*Billy Francis - keyboards, vocals (1968-1985, 2001-2010)
*George Cummings - lead and steel guitars, vocals (1968-1975)
John "Jay" David - drums (1968-1973)
Rik Elswit - guitar (1972-1985)
Jance Garfat - bass (1972-1985)
John Wolters - drums (1973-1982, 1983-1985)
Bob 'Willard' Henke - guitar, keyboards (1976-1980)
Rod Smarr - guitar (1980-1985)
Walter Hartman - drums (1982-1983)
Leonard Wolfe - keyboards (1983-1985)
*Joseph Olivier - drums (1968)
****CONTINUE BELOW****
Dr Hook & The Medicine Show Albums 📀:
Doctor Hook (1972)
Sloppy Seconds (1972)
Belly Up! (1973)
Bankrupt! (1975)
A Little Bit More (1976)
Makin' Love And Music (1977)
Pleasure And Pain (1978)
Sometimes You Win (1979)
Rising (1980)
Live In The UK aka Dr Hook Live (1981)
Players In The Dark (1982)
Let Me Drink From Your Well (1983)
George Cummings Albums 📀:
It Is What It Is w/ The Flares (2004)
Ray Sawyer Albums 📀:
Ray Sawyer (1976)
A Little Bit More (1996)
Dennis Locorriere Albums 📀:
Out Of The Dark (2000)
Alone with... (2002)
Live In Liverpool (2004)
One Of The Lucky Ones (2005)
Post Cool (2010)
Post Cool Live (2011)
The Voice Of Dr Hook (2021)
Some more good songs by Dr Hook & The Medicine Show 🎶: Sylvia's Mother, The Cover Of Rolling Stone, Only Sixteen, A Little Bit More, Sharing The Night Together, The Radio, Clyde, When You're In Love With A Beautiful Woman, The Ballad Of Lucy Jordan, Baby Makes Her Blue Jeans Talk, Lady Sundown, Queen Of The Silver Dollar, I Can't Say No To Her, The Turn On, Pity The Fool, Walk Right In, Chained To Her Memory, Devil's Daughter, Marie Lavaux, Sing Me A Rainbow, Hey Lady Godiva, Four Years Older Than Me, Kiss It Away, Makin' It Natural, When She Cries, Judy, Mama, I'll Sing One Song For You, Hearts Like Yours And Mine, Girls Can Get It, Blown Away, Lucky Night, S.O.S. For Love, Doin' It, Hold Me Like You Never Had Me, Beware Of Lovers, Do You Right Tonight, 99 And Me, Before The Tears, I Couldn't Believe, Feels Good, I'll Kill You, Making Love And Music, Drinking Wine Alone, You've Heard It All Before, The Ugliest Man In Town, Michelangelo, Got That Feeling, Yours & Mine, Angela's Eyes, Laying Too Low Too Long, What A Way To Go, That Didn't Hurt Too Bad, Sleeping Late, Walk Right In, Let The Loose End Drag, I'm A Lamb, Who Dat, Sexy Energy, Dooley Jones, I Wanna Make The Women Tremble, In Over My Head, Storms Never Last, All The Time In The World, I Don't Want To Be Alone Tonight, Knowing She's There, I Gave Her Comfort, You Make My Pants Want To Get Up And Dance, Years From Now, I Need To Love Again, I Got Stoned And Missed It, Let Me Be Your Lover, The Millionaire, Cooky And Lila, Wups, The Wonderful Soup Stone, Everybody's Making It Big But Me, Do Downs, Everybody Loves Me, On The Way To The Bottom, Bubblin' Up, If Not You, Bad Eye Bill, Up On The Mountain, Jungle To The Zoo, More Like The Movies, What About You, I Need The High, A Couple More Years, Better Love Next Time, Years From Now, I Don't Feel Much Like Smilin', What Do You Want?, Love Monster, Oh! Jesse, Stop Teasing My Heart, Mountain Mary, Let Me Drink From Your Well, Carry Me Carrie, Animal Instinct, Loveline, Don't Play That Song, Roland The Roadie And Gertrude The Groupie, Always Crying Over You, When You're 18, Boy Talk, Rings, Missing You Takes Up Most Of My Time, Strings, The Wild Colonial Boy, Life Ain't Easy, Crazy Rosie, The Things I Didn't Say, Cops And Robbers, Sweetest Of All, I Call That True Love, Fire In The Night, Levitate, Help Me Mama, Freakin' At The Freaker's Ball, If I'd Only Come And Gone, Penicillin Penny, When Lily Was Queen, Ballad Of..., Monterey Jack, Acapulco Goldie, You Ain't Got The Right, Put A Little Bit On Me, Get My Rocks Off, I Can't Touch The Sun, Bunky And Lucille, Come On In, Stayin' Song, Body Talkin', Rings Of Grass, I'll Put Angels Around You, Last Morning, Bonus Record and The Stimu.
Fun Fact 🕵: In 1996, German singer Bürger Lars Dietrich covered the song: "Sexy Eyes", under the title: "Sexy Eis".
🥀🌷⚘️🌹
Some reactions to consider 🤔: Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five- It's Nasty (Genius Of Love) (Official Music Video), Patsy Cline- Crazy Live (DiscoBar 80 YT channel) or Run DMC- Rock Box (Official Video).