Let the Music Take Control
"Let the Music Take Control" is a song by J.M. Silk, that was released as their fifth single, on RCA Records in 1987.
"Let the Music Take Control" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ||||
Single by J.M. Silk | ||||
from the album Hold on to Your Dream | ||||
B-side | "Remix" | |||
Released | 1987 | |||
Recorded | 1986 | |||
Genre | Chicago house | |||
Length | 3:55 | |||
Label | RCA Records | |||
Songwriter(s) | Keith Nunnally Steve Hurley | |||
Producer(s) | Steve "Silk" Hurley Phil Balsano | |||
Steve "Silk" Hurley singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
Alternative cover |
The song written by Steve "Silk" Hurley and Keith Nunnally peaked at number two in the US Dance chart in 1987,[1] reaching its top in UK at number forty-seven.[2]
Credits and personnel
Official versions
- "Let The Music Take Control (LP Version)" - 3:55
- "Let The Music Take Control (House Mix)" - 6:10
- "Let The Music Take Control (Radio Edit)" - 4:02
- "Let The Music Take Control (House of Trix Mix)" - 8:30
- "Let The Music Take Control (Insaneappella)" - 5:30
Charts and sales
Peak positions
Chart (1987) | Peak position |
---|---|
UK Singles Chart | 47 |
U.S. Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play | 2 |
gollark: I wonder how long it'll be before someone makes Unicode Turing-complete.
gollark: https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/5penft/parallelizing_enjarify_in_go_and_rust/dcsgk7n/I think this just wonderfully encapsulates Go.
gollark: Oh, it also has that weird conditional compile thing depending on `_linux.go` suffixes or `_test.go` ones I think?
gollark: Okay, sure, you can ignore that for Go itself, if we had Go-with-an-alternate-compiler-but-identical-language-bits it would be irrelevant.
gollark: I can't easily come up with a *ton* of examples of this, but stuff like generics being special-cased in for three types (because guess what, you *do* actually need them), certain basic operations returning either one or two values depending on how you interact with them, quirks of nil/closed channel operations, the standard library secretly having a `recover` mechanism and using it like exceptions a bit, multiple return values which are not first-class at all and which are used as a horrible, horrible way to do error handling, and all of go assembly, are just inconsistent and odd.
See also
- List of artists who reached number one on the US Dance chart
References
- 'J.M. Silk, US peak chart positions' Retrieved 2 December 2010
- 'J.M. Silk, UK peak chart positions' Retrieved 2 December 2010
External links
- Steve "Silk" Hurley on AllMusic
- J.M. Silk on AllMusic
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.