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Tina Turner - What's Love Got to Do with It (1993)

Tina Turner - What's Love Got to Do with It (1993)

BAND/ARTIST: Tina Turner

  • Title: What's Love Got to Do with It
  • Year Of Release: 1993
  • Label: Parlophone – 0777 7 89486 2 9 / CD, Europe version
  • Genre: Rock, R&B, Pop, Soul, Soundtrack
  • Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks+.cue,log artwork)
  • Total Time: 57:38
  • Total Size: 172 / 439 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. I Don't Wanna Fight (6:07)
02. Rock Me Baby (3:57)
03. Disco Inferno (4:03)
04. Why Must We Wait Until Tonight? (5:54)
05. Stay Awhile (4:50)
06. Nutbush City Limits (3:19)
07. (Darlin') You Know I Love You (4:27)
08. Proud Mary (5:26)
09. A Fool in Love (2:55)
10. It's Gonna Work Out Fine (2:49)
11. Shake a Tail Feather (2:33)
12. I Might Have Been Queen (4:21)
13. What's Love Got to Do with It (3:49)
14. Tina's Wish (3:08)

What's Love Got to Do with It is the eighth solo studio album by Tina Turner, released on June 15, 1993, by Parlophone. It served as the soundtrack album for the 1993 Tina Turner biographical film of the same name, which was released by Touchstone Pictures that same year.

Turner re-recorded many of her songs from the Ike & Tina Turner period for this album including their first successful single, "A Fool in Love". Three brand-new tracks were also included, "I Don't Wanna Fight" being a top-10 entry in both the US and UK, her last major American chart success. The album also includes Turner's version of The Trammps' disco classic "Disco Inferno", a song she had often performed live in concert during the late 1970s, but which she had never previously recorded in studio. Two tracks from her 1984 breakthrough solo album Private Dancer are included as well, the title track to the movie and "I Might Have Been Queen". The album hit #1 on the UK Albums Chart and was certified platinum in various countries including the US, the UK, Switzerland and New Zealand.

The US version of the album omits two tracks; "Shake a Tail Feather" and "Tina's Wish". Turner's version of "You Know I Love You" was not the B.B. King song but a slightly different, more blues rock song Tina wrote herself with her bandmates though she still credited the song to King on the soundtrack. Tina recalls singing the B.B. King ballad in her 1986 memoir, I, Tina.




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  • User offline
  • nilesh65
  •  wrote in 04:33
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Thank you so much for sharing!!
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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 20:45
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Many thanks for Flac.