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  1. Muscle of Love (1973) Greatest Hits (1974) Singles from Muscle of Love "Teenage Lament '74" Released: December 1973 ... Liza Minnelli, Labelle, Ronnie Spector, The Pointer Sisters Janice Buxton - background vocals; unnamed strings and horns; Charts. Chart (1973/74) Peak position Australian (Kent Music Report) 36 Finnish Albums ...

  2. In 1973, Spector sang back up with Liza Minnelli for Alice Cooper's song "Teenage Lament '74" from the album Muscle of Love (1973). By 1975, Spector was recording as a solo act. She released the single "You'd Be Good For Me" on Tom Cat Records in 1975.

  3. 11 de feb. de 2016 · Cinematic touches abound, and it would have worked wonderfully well as the official theme. It’s easily one of the most unjustly-overlooked titles in Cooper’s whole oeuvre. Listen closely to the backing vocalists: what you hear is Liza Minelli, Ronnie Spector, and the Pointer Sisters.

  4. wiki-gateway.eudic.net › wikipedia_en › Muscle_of_LoveMuscle of Love

    Muscle of Love (1973) Greatest Hits (1974) Muscle of Love is the seventh studio album by Alice Cooper, released in 1973. ... Ronnie Spector, and Liza Minnelli doing background vocals! We went to every single one of those John Barry albums to try and invent the perfect James Bond song, ...

  5. 25 de ene. de 2016 · Muscle of Love was a change in many areas from the 4 previous Platinum selling albums. ... Ronnie Spector, and the Pointer Sisters..Yeesh!]. Last track is another one of my favorite AC underrated songs in “Woman Machine”; a more mid-tempo guitar heavy track, lyrically based on a futuristic computerized female partner.

  6. Liza Minelli (vocals, "Teenage Lament" and "Man with the Golden Gun"), La Belle (Sarah and Noma) (vocals, "Teenage Lament"), Ronnie Spector ("Teenage Lament"), Pointer Sisters (vocals, "Teenage Lament", "Working Up A Sweat"). Recorded at Sunset Sound, Hollywood, California; Record Plant, New York; Galesi Estate, Greenwich, Connecticut.

  7. Recorded with a host of female backing singers, including Ronnie Spector and Liza Minnelli, "Teenage Lament '74" was the last big single from the classic Cooper line-up that uptight parents hated, and the rebellious youth rallied behind during the early years of the dazed and confused decade.