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Various Artists - Sounds of the Seventies: Dance Party - Boogie Nights mp3 download

Various Artists - Sounds of the Seventies: Dance Party - Boogie Nights mp3 download

Performer: Various Artists
Title: Sounds of the Seventies: Dance Party - Boogie Nights
Released: August 14, 2000
Size MP3 version: 1125 mb
Size FLAC version: 1662 mb
Size WMA version: 1956 mb
Rating: 4.2
Votes: 139
Format: VQF AAC MP2 AA MP4 TTA
Genre: Pop Rock

Various Artists - Sounds of the Seventies: Dance Party - Boogie Nights mp3 download


Текст песни: Boogie nights! Ain’t no doubt we are here to party Boogie nights! Come on now got to get it started.

For Discos Only: Indie Dance Music From Fantasy & Vanguard Records (1976-1981). Открывайте новую музыку каждый день.

Sounds of the Seventies: '70s Dance Party 1972-1974.

Listen free to Various Artists – Seventies: The Pop Generation (Dance Little Lady, I Will Survive and more). 17 tracks (). Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last.

100 Hits: Boogie Nights offers the ultimate collection of classic disco. The biggest hits from McFadden & Whitehead, The Jacksons, Aretha Franklin, Sly & The Family Stone, Earth, Wind & Fire, Boney M, The O'Jays and many others.

Heatwave - Boogie Nights. Wild Cherry - Play That Funky Music. Odyssey - Native New Yorker. The Best Seventies Album contains the defining tracks of the decade and features some of the biggest hits from artists including T. Rex, Mott The Hoople, Sweet, The Jacksons, David Essex, Earth, Wind & Fire with The Emotions, Nilsson, Eric Carmen, Baccara and many more. Extra information about this release.

Sounds of the Seventies was a BBC radio programme broadcast on weekdays, initially 18:00–19:00, subsequently 22:00–00:00, on Radio One during the early 1970s. Among the DJs were Mike Harding, Alan Black, Pete Drummond, Anne Nightingale, John Peel (who alone had two shows per week), and Bob Harris. For contractual reasons one of Peel's two weekly shows was known as Top Gear, but the format and content of the show on every weekday were in essence identical for most of the early 1970s.