It Was Almost Like a Song (album)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/It_Was_Almost_Like_a_Song_(album) an entity of type: Thing
It Was Almost Like a Song is the eighth studio album by American country music artist Ronnie Milsap. It was released in 1977 by RCA Records. The album produced two #1 hits for Milsap, including the title track, which marked his debut on the Adult Contemporary chart, peaking at #7 and reaching #16 on the Billboard 100. "What a Difference You've Made in My Life," was the other #1 single, it was re-recorded for his 2009 album Then Sings My Soul.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
It Was Almost Like a Song (album)
rdf:langString
It Was Almost Like a Song
xsd:integer
22850746
xsd:integer
1123346438
rdf:langString
It Was Almost Like a Song .jpg
<second>
164.0
179.0
190.0
198.0
202.0
215.0
229.0
234.0
239.0
254.0
2204.0
xsd:integer
1978
rdf:langString
Ronnie Milsap Live
xsd:integer
1976
rdf:langString
Ronnie Milsap, Tom Collins
xsd:integer
1977
rdf:langString
[{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r93220|pure_url=yes}} link]
rdf:langString
Selfish
rdf:langString
No One Will Ever Know
rdf:langString
Crystal Fallin' Rain
rdf:langString
Future's Not What It Used to Be
rdf:langString
Here in Love
rdf:langString
It Don't Hurt to Dream
rdf:langString
Long Distance Memory
rdf:langString
The Lovin' Kind
rdf:langString
Studio album
rdf:langString
John Schweers
rdf:langString
Schweers
rdf:langString
Archie Jordan
rdf:langString
Mel Foree, Fred Rose
rdf:langString
Dan Pate, Charles Quillen
rdf:langString
Hal David, Jordan
rdf:langString
It Was Almost Like a Song is the eighth studio album by American country music artist Ronnie Milsap. It was released in 1977 by RCA Records. The album produced two #1 hits for Milsap, including the title track, which marked his debut on the Adult Contemporary chart, peaking at #7 and reaching #16 on the Billboard 100. "What a Difference You've Made in My Life," was the other #1 single, it was re-recorded for his 2009 album Then Sings My Soul. It Was Almost Like a Song reached #3 on Country album charts and broke the Top 100 of the Billboard 200, peaking at #97. It was ultimately certified as Gold. The album won "Album of the Year" at the 1978 Country Music Association Awards. Allmusic described the album as Milsap's "breakthrough pop album" commenting that "the music here changed what radio programmers would accept" enabling the "chance" to "crossover."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
5274