Lovin' Every Minute of It
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lovin'_Every_Minute_of_It an entity of type: Thing
Lovin' Every Minute of It is the fourth studio album, released in 1985 by the rock band Loverboy. The album became a hit thanks to the title track which reached #9 at US Hot 100, while "This Could Be The Night" was #10, "Dangerous" #65 and "Lead A Double Life" #68. The album went double platinum, being the last of the band's to do so. Due to scheduling conflicts this is the first album the band did not use Bruce Fairbairn as their producer. Tom Allom was hired as a replacement.
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Lovin' Every Minute of It
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Lovin' Every Minute of It
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Loverboy
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Platinum
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LovineveryminuteofitLB.jpg
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1987
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2
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1983
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Tom Allom and Paul Dean
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Canada
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Kerrang!
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Friday Night
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Too Much Too Soon
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Bullet in the Chamber
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Destination Heartbreak
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Lead a Double Life
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Lovin' Every Minute of It
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Steal the Thunder
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Bryan Adams, Jim Vallance
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Dean, Sigerson, Wray
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Dean, Sigerson, Wray, Reno
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Jonathan Cain, Dean, Reno, Wray
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Patrick Mahassen, Wray, Dean, Sigerson
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Paul Dean, Mike Reno, Davitt Sigerson, Bill Wray
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Scott Smith, Wray, Reno, Dean
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Doug Johnson, Sigerson, Ted Johnson, Wray, Dean, Reno
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Lovin' Every Minute of It is the fourth studio album, released in 1985 by the rock band Loverboy. The album became a hit thanks to the title track which reached #9 at US Hot 100, while "This Could Be The Night" was #10, "Dangerous" #65 and "Lead A Double Life" #68. The album went double platinum, being the last of the band's to do so. Due to scheduling conflicts this is the first album the band did not use Bruce Fairbairn as their producer. Tom Allom was hired as a replacement. Cash Box said of the single "Lead a Double Life" that "Loverboy’s trademark straightforward pop/rock angle is given a slight 'new music,' Devo-ish bent here." Billboard said it borrows "aggressive mannerisms from the new wave."
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