"All I Wanted" | ||||
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Single by Kansas | ||||
from the album Power | ||||
Released | October 1986 [1] | |||
Recorded | 1986 | |||
Length | 3:20 | |||
Label | MCA | |||
Songwriter(s) | Steve Walsh, Steve Morse | |||
Producer(s) | Andrew Powell | |||
Kansas singles chronology | ||||
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"All I Wanted" is a single by the band Kansas. The song was released on the band's 1986 album Power and written by Steve Walsh and Steve Morse. [2]
It was their seventh and final Top 40 appearance, charting at #19 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. [3] The song takes a more pop approach than the band's previous songs.
Billboard said that it's "synth-based and relatively mellow." [4] Cash Box called it a "classic-sounding McCartney composition which elicits memories of some of his strongest material with Wings" with a taut rock beat punctuated by an urgent horn section." [5]
Chart (1987) | Peak position |
---|---|
Canada Top Singles ( RPM ) [6] | 75 |
Canada Adult Contemporary ( RPM ) [7] | 10 |
US Billboard Hot 100 [8] | 19 |
US Adult Contemporary ( Billboard ) [9] | 14 |
US Mainstream Rock ( Billboard ) [10] | 10 |
"Amanda" is a power ballad by American rock band Boston written by Tom Scholz. The song was released as the first single from the band's third album, Third Stage, in 1986, six years after it was recorded.
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"Broken Wings" is a 1985 song recorded by American pop rock band Mr. Mister. It was released in June 1985 as the lead single from their second album Welcome to the Real World. The song peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1985, where it remained for two weeks. It was released as the band was just about to embark on a US tour opening for Tina Turner. "Broken Wings" became the first of two consecutive number ones of the band on the American charts, the other chart-topper being "Kyrie". Outside of the United States, "Broken Wings" topped the charts in Canada, peaked within the top ten of the charts in Australia, Belgium (Flanders), the Netherlands, Norway, the Republic of Ireland, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and West Germany, and the top twenty of the charts in Austria, New Zealand, Spain and Sweden.
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