England Dan & John Ford Coley

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight 02:34 Tools
Love Is the Answer 04:43 Tools
We'll Never Have to Say Goodbye Again 02:52 Tools
It's Sad To Belong (Single Version) 02:54 Tools
Nights Are Forever Without You 02:55 Tools
What's Forever For 03:25 Tools
What Can I Do With This Broken Heart 03:13 Tools
Westward Wind 03:23 Tools
Lady 04:07 Tools
The Prisoner 03:33 Tools
Showboat Gambler 02:43 Tools
Broken Hearted Me 03:52 Tools
Love Is The Answer (Single Version) 04:42 Tools
Long Way Home 03:20 Tools
Only A Matter Of Time 03:14 Tools
Hold Me 03:38 Tools
I'll Stay 03:23 Tools
Just the Two of Us 02:22 Tools
We'll Never Have To Say Goodbye Again - Single Version 02:53 Tools
Soldier in the Rain 04:48 Tools
There'll Never Be Another For Me 02:53 Tools
It's Not The Same 02:41 Tools
Gone Too Far 02:58 Tools
Where Do I Go From Here (LP Version) 02:50 Tools
Love Is The Answer - Single Version 04:42 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight (Re-Record / Remasterd) 02:38 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight (Re-Recorded / Remastered) 02:38 Tools
Everything's Gonna Be Alright 03:09 Tools
Falling Stars 02:55 Tools
Just Tell Me You Love Me 02:47 Tools
Who's Lonely Now 03:25 Tools
Caught Up In The Middle 04:07 Tools
Dowdy Ferry Road 00:00 Tools
Wanting You Desperately 03:39 Tools
You Know We Belong Together (LP Version) 03:04 Tools
Where Do I Go from Here 03:00 Tools
It's Sad To Belong - Single Version 02:53 Tools
Night's Are Forever Without You 00:00 Tools
Why Is It Me 00:00 Tools
Some Things Don't Come Easy 04:26 Tools
Another Golden Oldie Night For Wendy 03:44 Tools
Rolling Fever 03:27 Tools
You Can't Dance 00:00 Tools
Children Of The Half Light 00:00 Tools
Running After You 00:00 Tools
In It For Love 04:44 Tools
You Know We Belong Together 00:00 Tools
It's Sad To Belong To Someone Else 00:00 Tools
Beyond the Tears 00:00 Tools
Don't Feel That Way No More 00:00 Tools
Love Is the One Thing We Hide 00:00 Tools
Lovin' Somebody on a Rainy Night 00:00 Tools
If The World Ran Out Of Love 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Like to See You Tonight 02:38 Tools
Holocaust 03:12 Tools
Gone Too Far (Single Version) 00:00 Tools
Hollywood Heckle and Jive 00:00 Tools
Calling for You Again 00:00 Tools
Gone Too Far - Single Version 00:00 Tools
Nights Are Forever 00:00 Tools
Simone 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You 00:00 Tools
Falling Stars (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Some Things Don't Come Easy - Single Version 00:00 Tools
Don't Feel That Way No More (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Love Is The Answer [Single Version] 00:00 Tools
Dowdy Ferry Road (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Soldier In The Rain (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Some Things Don't Come Easy (Single Version) 00:00 Tools
Love Is The One Thing We Hide (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Hollywood Heckle & Jive 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight (Re-Record / Remasterd) 00:00 Tools
Just Remember I Love You 03:19 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight - LP Version 02:38 Tools
Part of Me, Part of You 00:00 Tools
Holocaust (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
If the World Ran Out of Love Tonight 03:04 Tools
Who's Lonely Now (Single/LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Casey 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonite 00:00 Tools
Carolina 00:00 Tools
Love Is The Answer (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Matthew 00:00 Tools
Tomorrow 00:00 Tools
Free The People 00:00 Tools
Who's Lonely Now - Single/LP Version 00:00 Tools
What I'm Doing 00:00 Tools
Candles Of Our Lives 00:00 Tools
Stay By The River 00:00 Tools
I’d Really Love to See You Tonight 00:00 Tools
Keep Your Smile 00:00 Tools
Life Is Beautiful 00:00 Tools
I'm going to find tomorrow 00:00 Tools
New Jersey 00:00 Tools
Moving On Down The Line 00:00 Tools
Rainbows For Your Eyes 00:00 Tools
Just The Two Of Us (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Who's Lonely Now - Single/ 00:00 Tools
Broken Hearted Me (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Tell Her Hello 00:00 Tools
Maui 00:00 Tools
Leaving It All Behind 00:00 Tools
Mud And Stone 00:00 Tools
Slow Dancin' (Swayin' To The Music) 00:00 Tools
Some Things Dont Come Easy 00:00 Tools
Miss Me 00:00 Tools
Children Of The Half-Light 00:00 Tools
Baby, Baby Falling In Love Again 00:00 Tools
Nights Are Forever Without You [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
Never Never Night 00:00 Tools
Nighs Are Forever Without You 00:00 Tools
Elysian Fields 00:00 Tools
What's Forever For (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Ask the Rain 00:00 Tools
Lady Rose 00:00 Tools
When Will I See You Again 00:00 Tools
Carry On 00:00 Tools
Used To You 00:00 Tools
Swamp River 00:00 Tools
prelude 00:00 Tools
The Pilot 00:00 Tools
I`d Really Love To See You Tonight 00:00 Tools
Winning Side 00:00 Tools
Legendary Captain 00:00 Tools
I'm Home 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonite (1976) 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Like to See You Ton 00:00 Tools
another Golden Oldie Night 00:00 Tools
James at 15 (It's All Up To You) 00:00 Tools
maybe Tonite 00:00 Tools
I Hear The Music 00:00 Tools
Idolizer 00:00 Tools
James at 15 ("It's All Up To You") 00:00 Tools
Just Tell Me You Love Me Inst 00:00 Tools
Long Way Home (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
I Really Want To See You Tonight 00:00 Tools
Hold Me (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Just When I Needed You Most 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tongiht 00:00 Tools
Westward Wind (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Lady (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight - England Dan & John Ford Coley 02:50 Tools
It's Sad To Belong [Single Version] 00:00 Tools
I\'d Really Love To See You Tonight 00:00 Tools
Summer Breeze 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight ('76) 00:00 Tools
I Really Love To See You Tonig 00:00 Tools
(i'd Really) Love To See You Again 00:00 Tools
dont Think Twice 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love to See You Tonight (with lyrics) 00:00 Tools
It's Not The Same (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love to See You Tonight (2012 Collection Remaster) 02:40 Tools
Holocaust (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight (1976) 00:00 Tools
Slow Dancin' 00:00 Tools
Just Tell Me You Love Me (Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Love Is The Answer [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
I´d Really Love To See You Tonight 00:00 Tools
Just Tell Me You Love Me - From "Just Tell Me You Love Me" Soundtrack 00:00 Tools
We'll Never Have To Say Goodbye Again [Single Version] 00:00 Tools
Who's Lonely Now (Single/LP Version) (Single/) 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Again 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonigh 00:00 Tools
It`s Sad To Belong 00:00 Tools
Somethings Don't Come Easy 00:00 Tools
I'd really love to see you... 00:00 Tools
Calling For You Again (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight / Egland Dan & Jon Ford Coley 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight [vk.com/itunesmusic_inc] 00:00 Tools
Nights Are Forever Without Yo 00:00 Tools
Nights are Forever - England D 00:00 Tools
What can I do with this broke 00:00 Tools
Everything's Gonna Be Alright [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
id really love to see you toni 00:00 Tools
Nights Are Forever Without You - LP Version 00:00 Tools
Gone To Far 00:00 Tools
We'll Never Have to Say Goodbye Aga 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight (2007 Remastered Version) 00:00 Tools
(I'd Really) Love to See You Tonight 00:00 Tools
It's Sad to Belong (To Someone Else) 00:00 Tools
Lovin' Somebody On a Rainy Night (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
The Prisoner [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
07 - Love Is The Answer - Coley, John Ford & England Dan 02:50 Tools
Never, Never Night 00:00 Tools
Broken Hearted Me - LP Version 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love 2 See U Tonite (blip.up) 00:00 Tools
シーモンの涙 00:00 Tools
It's Sad To Belong 00:00 Tools
What Can I Do With This Broken Heart (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
Beyond The Tears (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
It’s Sad To Belong 02:52 Tools
Movin' on Down the Line 00:00 Tools
Lady [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
Gone Too Far [Single Version] 00:00 Tools
Showboat Gambler (LP Version) 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight (76) 00:00 Tools
I'd Realy Love to See You Tonight 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Want to See You Tonight 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You Tonight (LP Version) [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
Children Of The Half Night 00:00 Tools
It's Not The Same [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
England Dan & John Ford Coley - I'd Really Love To See You Tonight (LP Version) 02:53 Tools
What Can I Do With This Broken Heart [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
I'd Really Love To See You T 00:00 Tools
well never say goodbye 00:00 Tools
Showboat Gambler [LP Version] 00:00 Tools
We'll Never Have To Say Good Bye 00:00 Tools
Id Really Love To See 00:00 Tools
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The seeds of one of classic rock's most pleasant sounding duos were sown when Dan Seals and John Colley first met in high school in Dallas, Texas during the early 1960s. Dan Seals was born February 8, 1950, in McCamey, Texas. To say that he came from a musical family would be an understatement. He was the son of E. W. "Waylon" Seals, a pipe fitter and repairman for Shell Oil who also played guitar and bass, and was a member of bands led by Ernest Tubb and Bob Wills. By the time he was four, Dan had learned to play upright bass and soon after he was playing in the family band. His older brother, Jim Seals recorded a hit single called "Tequilla", as a member of the Champs from 1958 thru the mid-1960s, then as one half of the duo "Seals And Croft". His other brothers included successful country musicians Eddie Seals (of Eddie and Joe), while his cousins included composers Chuck Seals (author of "Crazy Arms") and Troy Seals, Brady Seals (of Little Texas), and country singer Johnny Duncan. John Colley, born October 13th 1951, was a classically trained pianist. The two began working together as members of local cover bands, including Playboys Five and Theze Few. They recorded a series of demos in Nashville as The Shimmerers, but their prospects ended with the death of their producer, before he could secure a recording deal for them. It was as members of a group called Southwest F.O.B. (Freight On Board) that the two first paired off as a formal duo. The band, with Colley on keyboards and Seals playing sax as well as singing, played a mixture of rock and R&B and became popular locally in Dallas. They were signed to Hip Records, a division of Stax/Volt, and in 1968, released an album called "Smell of Incense", the title song of which, made it to No. 56. Seals and Colley had begun writing songs together around this time and recognized that they were moving in a different direction from the rest of the band, more toward Paul Simon than Jimi Hendrix. Soon, the were opening shows for the band with an acoustic set featuring their harmony vocals, warming the crowd up before the entire Southwest F.O.B. took the stage. They remained with the group until 1969, when they decided to head to California and try and land a recording contract as a duo. Originally billing themselves as "Colley and Wayland", (Seals' middle name) the name didn't quite work, and it was Dan's brother, Jim Seals who suggested they incorporate Dan's childhood nickname, "England Dan". It was a reference to the fact that, as a youngster, Dan had fixated on the Beatles and briefly affected an English accent. "Ford" was added to John Colley's name, and the spelling of his last name shortened to "Coley" to assure its proper pronunciation. England Dan & John Ford Coley not only flowed well, but was unusual enough to merit a second look from programmers, reviewers, and promoters, as well as the general public, even if they'd never heard any of the duo's music. As "England Dan & John Ford Coley", they were signed to A&M Records in 1970, with the assistance of guitarist Louis Shelton, who'd played with Jim Seals in The Dawnbreakers (and would be part of Seals & Croft's band), and who had brought the duo's demo to Herb Alpert. A pair of LPs, a self-titled debut album and "Fables", both produced by Shelton, resulted in very modest sales, a minor chart entry with the song "New Jersey" at number 103, and a No. 1 Japanese hit single ("Simone"). Those albums and singles featured a somewhat rougher textured version of the sound for which they would later become known, and an array of Los Angeles sessionmen including Larry Knechtel, Tommy Morgan, and Hal Blaine, not to mention string arrangements by Marty Paich. When their contract ran out in 1972, they were dropped by A&M. Not easily discouraged, they kept performing, and Coley was hired to play on a couple of Seals & Croft albums. Four years later, in 1976, their manager heard a demo of a new song called "I'd Really Love To See You Tonight", written by a Mississippi-based composer named Parker McGee. The duo cut their own demo of the tune and began shopping it around to different record labels. Ironically, it was after an executive at Atlantic Records turned it down that Doug Morris of Big Tree Records, having heard it through the wall of his adjoining office, offered them a contract. Dan and John were paired with producer Kyle Lehning, who had also made McGee's demo. The result was a No. 2 pop single in the spring of 1976, which ultimately sold two million copies. July of 1976 saw the release of England Dan & John Ford Coley's debut album for Big Tree, "Nights Are Forever", also produced by Lehning. Their second Big Tree single, "Nights Are Forever Without You," also written by Parker McGee, also made the Top 10. By 1977, they recorded a second album called, "Dowdy Ferry Road", which yielded a pair of songs, "It's Sad To Belong (To Someone Else)" and "Gone Too Far", both Top Twenty hits. These two more moderate success didn't seem to satisfy the record label, and the duo found themselves being pressured to find songs by other composers with which they could scale the top 10. They'd spent years perfecting a sound and two complimentary styles of composition that would allow them to do things musically that were important to them, but both Seals and Coley found the most personal aspect of their work shunted aside and held out of the most prominent positions in their work. Their third LP, "Some Things Don't Come Easy", seemed to say more than was intended with its title. The 1978 album generated a top 10 hit with "We'll Never Have To Say Goodbye Again," but it was the work of songwriter Jeffrey Comanor, rather than either Seals or Coley. Additionally, the album was mixed in New York, in contrast to their prior work, which was recorded and mixed out of Lee Hazen's studio in Hendersonville, Tennessee. This pointed to the increasing need for a new sound and texture from the duo's work. By the end of the 1970s, England Dan & John Ford Coley were beset by new pressures from all sides. The perception was that, between the burgeoning disco boom and the undercurrent of punk rock, their continuing with the brand of harmony-based, melodic pop-rock in which they specialized, was a losing battle. After some near-disastrous sessions in Los Angeles, they salvaged only a single song, one that proved to be their last top 10 hit, "Love Is The Answer," written by Todd Rundgren. They made one last effort at selling their sweetly harmonized music in the form of the single "Why Is It Me," and contributed one song "Part of Me Part of You," from the movie "Just Tell Me You Love Me". Following the release of a "best of" album in 1980, the pair went their separate ways. Dan Seals initially pursued a career in pop-rock as England Dan on Atlantic (which had bought up Big Tree Records), and managed a low placement in the top 100 with "Late At Night." It was around this time, however, that the Internal Revenue Service began an action against Seals which resulted in the seizure of virtually all of his assets. He re-emerged, still produced by Kyle Lehning, as Dan Seals and reinvented himself as a country performer. After hitting the country charts three times in one year with "Everybody's Dream Girl," "After You," and "You Really Go For The Heart," he moved into high gear with a six year string of major hits, including nine No. 1 country hits in a row, and a string of Country Music Association awards to go with them. John Ford Coley withdrew from performing after the split, although he did return to A&M Records in 1981 to cut an album, "Leslie, Kelly & John Ford Coley" with singers Leslie Bulkin and Kelly Bulkin, on which Jim Seals' long-time partner Dash Crofts did some singing. During the early/middle 1990's, he reappeared as a solo artist in southern California. John has also had some success as an actor, appearing in the film Dream A Little Dream with Corey Feldman and Corey Haim as well as a movie called Scenes From A Goldmine. He also played the part of the bad guy on an episode of America's Most Wanted. In 1996, Rhino Records released "The Very Best of England Dan & John Ford Coley", a 16-song compilation. Whatever success they enjoyed in reshaping their images and music, England Dan & John Ford Coley will always draw smiles and warm feelings about a simpler, more innocent age for which they wrote a good deal of the nicest music of the decade. Read more on Last.fm. 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