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Curtis Anderson - The Hardest Part album

Curtis Anderson - The Hardest Part album

  • Performer: Curtis Anderson
  • Genre: Soulful music
  • Title: The Hardest Part
  • Released: 1984
  • Style: Soul
  • MP3 version size: 1792 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1489 mb
  • Other: VOX FLAC RA ASF WMA AUD ADX
  • Rating: 4.1
  • Votes: 809

Description

Complete your Curtis Anderson collection.

The Hardest Part is the second album by singer/songwriter Allison Moorer. The album is a concept album about a doomed relationship produced and co-written by Moorer's then husband Doyle Lee Primm. The album is based on her parents' relationship which ended tragically in the mid 80s when Moorer's father murdered her mother before killing himself. She told No Depression magazine in 2000: "This record was inspired by the things I saw my mother go through

Curtis Anderson - The Hardest Part. Curtis Anderson - The Hardest Part.

The Hardest Part" is a 1979 song by the American new wave band Blondie. In North America, it was released as the second single from the band's fourth album Eat to the Beat (in Europe, "Union City Blue" was released as the second single). It was written by the group's principal songwriting partnership, Deborah Harry and Chris Stein. The single achieved minor success, reaching and on the Billboard Hot 100 and RPM 100 Singles respectively.

Curtis Anderson - The Hardest Part (198x). Curtis anderson~the hardest part 1984. Curtis Anderson "The hardest part" Curtis Anderson - The hardest part.

Gary Goetzman, Mike Piccirillo.

Curtis Anderson: From 1980 till 1982 Curtis Anderson released two singles. The first single CURTIS ANDERSON, released in the eighties, is 'the hardest part' on brown bag Records. 1982 - The Hardest Part.

Is that Curtis Anderson the former Baltimore MD? Mykel Colby 5 years ago. just checked the Donald Albert version, it's just not as good as this, especially production-wise. Straight Jacket The Greatest Part Of ics. She told No Depression magazine in 2000: "This record was inspired by the.

Tracklist

A The Hardest Part
B The Hardest Part (Instrumental)

Companies, etc.

  • Produced For – George Tobin Productions, Inc.
  • Mastered At – Capitol Mastering
  • Published By – Chardax Music

Credits

  • Mastered By – Eddy Schreyer
  • Producer, Arranged By – George Tobin
  • Written-By – Gary Goetzman, Mike Piccirillo

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout (Engraved [Side A]): BB-A- ̶5̶9̶5̶1̶ 5651 G-1 PRC C1-1-1
  • Matrix / Runout (Engraved [Side B]): BB-B- 5̶9̶5̶1̶ 5651 G-1 PRC C1-1-1
  • Matrix / Runout (Stamped [Both Sides]): MASTERED BY CAPITOL

Video

Comments

Shalinrad Shalinrad
Big tune, but if your patient and lucky you can pick it up much cheaper on eBay around £400-500. I found this (with a bunch of other 7's at thrift store selling a DJ's collection at 50p a pop) back in the day. I think it was 1985 or 1986, when no one really knew this, though the UK's 'soul mafia' later turned this into one of the most sought after during the late 80's early 90's. After the UNAUTHORISED version by Donald Albert came out on 12" in 1987, the prices for this original really took off.
Charyoll Charyoll
The singer, Curtis Anderson, has died.He will, probably, be best remembered for his 1980 Brown Bag Records single ‘The Hardest Part’ (a song later covered by the artist Donald Albert in the early Nineties).Curtis was diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer last year, undergoing chemotherapy during September 2014.
lets go baby lets go baby
Echo everything Girth says and for good measure there was a remake in about 1987 recorded by Donald Albert. Many (myself included) prefer Albert's version which is much less expensive!
Ckelond Ckelond
A record that went from being totally unknown, and in a very short space of time to being the most wanted record on the Modern Soul scene in the late 80s / early 90s. Initially known in the early days from handful of copies that were distributed around some of the Modern DJs at the time, especially centered around the Upnorth / Southport weekenders. The plan was to get it played and wanted, and then there was supposed to be 100s of copies coming into the country at a later date. For numerous reasons, this never happened - and it became one of the biggest records in the UK modern scene, only played by a handful of DJs. For a good many years only those first copies were known, and a couple or three changed hands for many 100s of £. Copies have since surfaced on Ebay, one particular batch - all mint / unplayed and selling for £100s.....A classic piece of 80s Modern Soul history and remains very rare & decidely expensive.....