When the radio was playing it to death, you couldn't buy it in the shops – a ludicrous situation." The song had originally been produced by Mitchell and Coe for Scottish singer Ellie Warren in 1980 Warren recalls "all the radio stations and media were totally behind 'Shattered Glass', but the record wasn't serviced properly. The song was released on Jby Atlantic Records. The song was recorded in 1987 by American singer Laura Branigan with the Stock Aitken Waterman production team to serve as the lead single from Branigan's fifth studio album, Touch (1987). " Shattered Glass" is a song written by Bob Mitchell and Steve Coe which was originally recorded in 1980 by Scottish singer Ellie Warren. Who could sing this today and have a hit? CARLY RAE JEPSEN.WikiMili Shattered Glass (Laura Branigan song) Last updated Septem"Shattered Glass"
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They just forgot to tell anyone about it. Stock, Aitken and Waterman had four records in the UK top 40 at the time and Rick Astley‘s Never Gonna Give You Up was just about to rocket to no.1, so the hit was theirs for the taking. Shattered Glass possesses every single quality of the classic S/A/W smash hit sound – so why wasn’t it? I lay the blame squarely at the door of Atlantic Records – they had a great track record with soul and rock, but weren’t quite so effective when it came to pop. The entire thing is lifted by a quite incredible vocal from Laura – I defy you not to get goosebumps when she belts out “and everything you hold just falls apart like sha-aaattered glass.” The production positively glistens with crystal-clear icy synths, their trademark chug-chug all the way through and plenty of pauses for dramatic hand movements. But as they proved with any number of cover versions, it’s hard to tell the difference once their pop sheen was applied. In 1987 the trio were drafted in to rescue the career of another American pop legend – Laura Branigan, who’d enjoyed two massive UK hits with Gloria and the cruising classic Self Control. Only this time it wasn’t for real – and despite being as good as anything they later produced for Donna, Shattered Glass proved to be the last time Laura would trouble the UK charts.Īn early empowerment anthem (“You can shatter glass with your heart of stone, but you won’t get far on your own”) Shattered Glass has an enjoyably literal video which begins with Laura bursting through a pane of glass looking faintly terrified, and is fairly unusual for a S/A/W production because they didn’t actually write it. Its first single This Time I Know It’s For Real was possibly their best moment overall – joyous, sophisticated, and perfectly sung – and became a massive hit on both sides of the Atlantic.īut this wasn’t the first time it had happened. S/A/W were principally known for turning people into pop stars e.g.) Rick Astley and Sonia, but what would happen when they collided with someone who was already famous and an incredible vocalist? That question was answered when they teamed up with Donna Summer for 1989’s Another Place and Time album: magic would happen. But the classics – Better the Devil You Know, Never Gonna Give You Up, Toy Boy – are as good as anything in the wider pop pantheon. When it didn’t work – as with Mandy Smith – they just gave the record to Kylie or Sinitta and then it did. When it worked – as with Kylie – they were unbeatable: as throwaway as a bag of chips but as memorable as a first decent snog.
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You needed only the barest modicum of singing talent (bolstered by the mysterious Calrec Soundfield Microphone) and the ability to do exactly as you were told. Yet collectively they formed a magnificent DIY army that almost anyone (see The Reynolds Girls) could join. It’s always been easy to scoff at what S/A/W achieved – none of their acts (bar Kylie) posed a genuine threat to any of the superstars of the time. It’s almost impossible to discuss pop music at the end of the 1980s without mentioning Stock, Aitken and Waterman. For the last two years of the decade they essentially colonised the UK charts, scoring 13 number ones and more than 100 top 40 hits, subsequently inspiring a level of hate not seen since the “Disco sucks” campaign of 1979.