Take It to Heart

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

Take It to Heart is the third solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Michael McDonald. It was released on May 15, 1990, on the label Reprise, five years after his previous studio album, No Lookin' Back. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Take It to Heart
rdf:langString Take It to Heart
xsd:integer 47895879
xsd:integer 1102556241
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString Michael McDonald Take It to Heart.jpg
rdf:langString Side one
rdf:langString Side two
<second> 222.0 252.0 265.0 275.0 277.0 280.0 294.0 299.0 340.0 345.0 357.0
xsd:integer 1993
xsd:integer 1986
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Michael McDonald
rdf:langString David Gamson
rdf:langString Gardner Cole
rdf:langString Don Was
rdf:langString Ted Templeman
xsd:integer 1989
xsd:date 1990-05-15
rdf:langString
rdf:langString A&M Studios
rdf:langString Axis Studios
rdf:langString Can-Am Recorders
rdf:langString Smoketree Ranch
rdf:langString One On One Recording
rdf:langString Tear It Up
rdf:langString Homeboy
rdf:langString One Step Away
rdf:langString All We Got
rdf:langString Take It to Heart
rdf:langString Love Can Break Your Heart
rdf:langString Get the Word Started
rdf:langString Lonely Talk
rdf:langString No Amount of Reason
rdf:langString Searchin' for Understanding
rdf:langString You Show Me
<second> 3206.0
rdf:langString Studio
rdf:langString
rdf:langString McDonald
rdf:langString David Pack
rdf:langString Michael McDonald
rdf:langString Chris Thompson
rdf:langString George Hawkins
rdf:langString Darrell Brown
rdf:langString Diane Warren
rdf:langString Peter Leinheiser
rdf:langString Gardner Cole
rdf:langString Chuck Sabatino
rdf:langString Paul Carrack
rdf:langString Seth Swirsky
rdf:langString Ed Sanford
rdf:langString Tom Whitlock
rdf:langString Harry Garfield
rdf:langString Take It to Heart is the third solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Michael McDonald. It was released on May 15, 1990, on the label Reprise, five years after his previous studio album, No Lookin' Back. The album was slated to be titled “Lonely Talk” to be issued in August 1989. It also had a different track list, containing a song called “Plain of Jars” and a cover of Stevie Wonder’s “Higher Ground” (which ended up on his 1st Greatest Hits collection); there were also different versions of current tracks that made the official album. About 3 weeks prior to its original planned issue date, Reprise/WB decided there were not enough potential singles; therefore, “Tear It Up,” “All We Got” and “Get the Word Started” were added, with “Take It to Heart” recorded and added, which meant some songs and some versions were removed or changed (details unknown).
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8328

data from the linked data cloud