Lost in Emotion

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lost_in_Emotion an entity of type: Thing

Lost in Emotion ist ein Lied von Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam aus dem Jahr 1987, das von Curt Bedeau, Gerry Charles, Hugh L. Clarke, Brian George, Lucien George und Paul George geschrieben wurde. Es erschien auf dem Album Spanish Fly und wurde von Full Force produziert. rdf:langString
"Lost in Emotion" is a song by urban contemporary band Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam that appeared on their 1987 album Spanish Fly. The song hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 on October 17, 1987. The song was their second number-one single (having scored this first earlier in the year with "Head to Toe"). The song also went to number one on the Black Singles chart, and number eight on the dance chart. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Lost in Emotion
rdf:langString Lost in Emotion
rdf:langString Lost in Emotion
rdf:langString Lost in Emotion
xsd:integer 11773874
xsd:integer 1098711534
rdf:langString Motion Is Lost
rdf:langString Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam Lost.jpg
rdf:langString * 5:07 * 4:36
xsd:integer 1987
xsd:integer 1987
rdf:langString July 1987
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString * Curt Bedeau * Gerry Charles * Hugh L Clarke * Brian George * Lucien George * Paul George
rdf:langString Lost in Emotion ist ein Lied von Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam aus dem Jahr 1987, das von Curt Bedeau, Gerry Charles, Hugh L. Clarke, Brian George, Lucien George und Paul George geschrieben wurde. Es erschien auf dem Album Spanish Fly und wurde von Full Force produziert.
rdf:langString "Lost in Emotion" is a song by urban contemporary band Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam that appeared on their 1987 album Spanish Fly. The song hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 on October 17, 1987. The song was their second number-one single (having scored this first earlier in the year with "Head to Toe"). The song also went to number one on the Black Singles chart, and number eight on the dance chart. Full Force member Lou George describes "Lost in Emotion" as "a combination" of two Mary Wells' hits: "Two Lovers" and "You Beat Me to the Punch", an idea which occurred to George as the result of his playing Wells' Greatest Hits album on which "Two Lovers" and "You Beat Me to the Punch" were sequential tracks. George - "We didn't steal the riffs: all we did was get the flavoring...We [used] a xylophone and some bells because back in the Motown days they always used those simple instruments."
<minute> 4.6
<minute> 5.116666666666666
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6544
xsd:double 276.0 307.0

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