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3 Comments

  1. The Hooters artist profile, part 1 | Keystone Rock Review
    September 29, 2016 @ 8:23 am

    […] played bass, saxophone, and added vocals to the album, which would become the Grammy winning album She’s So Unusual. Hyman played keyboards and co-wrote the international smash hit “Time After Time”, […]

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  2. The Hooters Story, pt. I | Modern Rock Review
    July 6, 2022 @ 12:50 pm

    […] played bass, saxophone, and added vocals to the album, which would become the Grammy winning album She’s So Unusual. Hyman played keyboards and co-wrote the international smash hit “Time After Time”, […]

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  3. Robert
    October 12, 2024 @ 7:44 pm

    SSU was definitely a collaborative project, but I am compelled to point out that Lauper did a lot more than sing on this album. She was the creative force behind it. She wrote five, not two, songs recorded during the sessions. Four ended up on the album and one (“Right Track Wrong Train”) ended up on the back of the “Girls” single. One of the songs she wrote is her biggest hit, a signature song that has been covered by a gajillion artists, including Miles Davis, across as many genres. Another song she wrote is in her top five biggest hits.

    Lauper took the lead on the arrangements; Prince at one point said that her cover of “When You Were Mine” was his favorite cover of all his songs. She also called all the shots on the visuals; the cover shot (by Annie Leibovitz) was her interpretation of ‘Whipped Cream and Other Delights,’ and it’s an iconic image. I don’t agree that the album ends weakly — I actually love “I’ll Kiss You.” But we’re all entitled to our opinion.

    Reading the review, I sensed that the writer did not have all the info and as a result some of the observations were not accurate. Hence my comment.

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