A song recorded for Tina Turner's blockbuster album Private Dancer, that was presumed lost, has been rediscovered and received its first play on BBC Radio 2. Hot For You, Baby, was cut at Capitol Studios in Hollywood and originally intended to be an album track.
“A song which essentially expresses one idea — 'hot for you, baby’ — was a little monochromatic for her,” said Rolling Stone magazine contributing editor Anthony DeCurtis. “The rest of the stuff that’s on Private Dancer is much more nuanced.”
A lost song from Tina Turner’s 1984 album Private Dancer has been found. The track, “Hot for You, Baby,” premiered this morning on the BBC’s Radio 2 Breakfast Show, marking its first public play.
Tina Turner's Grammy award-winning album "Private Dancer" is receiving its flowers once again — this time via a jam-packed 40th-anniversary edition containing a "lost" track, set to be released ...
Paul Natkin/Getty Tina Turner’s music is back ... The track — written by Australian singer John Paul Young and produced by John Carter — was initially set to appear on her 1984 album ...
Hot for You Baby” was intended to be included on the 1984 album “Private Dancer.” Now, it will be released in a 40th-anniversary edition.
A Tina Turner song that was thought lost was re ... "Hot For You Baby" — produced by John Grant, written by George Young and Harry Vanda and recorded at Capitol Studios in Hollywood ...
Tina Turner's lost song from the album Private Dancer has been rediscovered.A long-lost , Hot For You, Baby, originally recorded for her iconic 1984 album Private Dancer, has been rediscovered
A lost song from Tina Turner‘s 1984 album Private Dancer ... The song was recorded at Capitol Studios in Hollywood and produced by John Grant. It was written by Australian musicians George ...
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Music company says debut track, Til the Nights Done, is the first of many on the way under a label the young Trudeau co ...
Hot For You Baby” was originally meant to be included on Turner's 1984 career-defining album "Private Dancer."
Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson have reunited for a “True Detective” moment in a new ad directed by series creator Nic Pizzolato. In the video for True to Texas, McConaughey and Harrelson — who embody their “True Detective” characters Detectives Rust Cohle and Marty Hart, respectively — call for the Texas legislature to create new …