L.O.V.E (Terri Walker album)
Appearance
(Redirected from Whoopsie Daisy)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2009) |
L.O.V.E | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 28 March 2005 | |||
Recorded | 2004 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 46:00 | |||
Label | Mercury Records | |||
Producer |
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Terri Walker chronology | ||||
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L.O.V.E (which stands for "Love Overcomes Virtually Everything") is the title of the second album from UK R&B / soul singer Terri Walker. The album was released in 2005 by Mercury Records and spawned 2 singles, "Whoopsie Daisy", which just missed out on a UK top 40 chart placing and "This Is My Time", which was cancelled just before the release date.
The London Daily Mirror called it "a cut above her substandard debut", and praised Walker's voice as one that "knocks competitors into the underachieving box".[1]
Track listing
[edit]- This Is My Time
- L.O.V.E
- Whoopsie Daisy
- Hurt By Love
- What The Hell
- Slow It Up
- Star
- Ain't No Love
- The Woman You Want
- The One That Got Away
- Feel Love
- Yes I Do
Singles
[edit]Name | Released | Recorded | Writer | Producer | Chart position |
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"Whoopsie Daisy" | 14 March 2005 | By Joe Belmaati, C&J Studios, Copenhagen. | Terri Walker Remee Joe Belmaati Mich Hansen |
Cutfather & Joe for XL Talent. | #41 (UK) |
"Whoopsie Daisy" was the first and only single from UK R&B / Soul singer Terri Walker's second album "L.O.V.E". The single was released on 14 March 2005, missing out on the UK top 40 buy one place, peaking at #41 in the UK singles charts. | |||||
"This Is My Time" | 11 July 2005 [Planned Release Date - Cancelled] | By Joe Belmaati, C&J Studios, Copenhagen & Andy Love & Jos Jorgensen at Farm Road Studio | Terri Walker Jos Jorgensen Andy Love Richard Randolph Kevin Spencer Ricky Smith. |
Cutfather & Joe for XL Talent. | CANCELLED (UK) |
"This Is My Time" was the planned second single from UK R&B / Soul singer Terri Walker's second album "L.O.V.E". The single was originally due for release on 20 June 2005 but was put back until 11 July. However, the single's release was cancelled just before the release date due to lack of promotion, airplay and videoplay. | |||||
References
[edit]- ^ "New Albums". Daily Mirror. London. 25 March 2005. Retrieved 10 February 2010.