Description
Additional information about this, Belinda Carlise vinyl art.
Belinda Carlise – The Artist
Belinda Jo Carlisle (born 1958) is an American singer and songwriter. She gained fame as the lead vocalist of the Go-Go’s, one of the most successful all-female rock bands of all time, and went on to have a prolific career as a solo artist. Raised in Southern California, Carlisle was the lead vocalist of the Go-Go’s, which she co-founded in 1978. With their chart-topping debut studio album Beauty and the Beat in 1981, the group helped popularise new wave music in the United States. The Go-Go’s have sold over seven million records worldwide. After the break-up of the Go-Go’s in 1985, Carlisle went on to have a successful solo career with radio hits such as “Mad About You”, “I Get Weak”, “Circle in the Sand”, “Leave a Light On”, “Summer Rain”, and “Heaven Is a Place on Earth”. The Go-Go’s reformed in 1999, and Carlisle performed with them until their disbandment in 2022, while also maintaining her solo career.
Don’t Stop Til You Get Enough – The Song
Heaven is a Place on Earth is a single by American singer Belinda Carlisle from her second studio album, Heaven on Earth (1987). Written by Rick Nowels and Ellen Shipley, the song was released as the lead single from the album. It was her best selling hit in both the UK and the US. It is considered to be Carlisle’s signature song. In 2015, Carlisle re-recorded the song as an acoustic ballad. This version appeared on her album Wilder Shores (2017), which combines acoustic tracks with world beats and traditional Sikh chants. Carlisle’s backup vocalists on the song include songwriters Nowels and Shipley as well as Michelle Phillips of The Mamas & the Papas, Chynna Phillips of Wilson Phillips, and songwriter Diane Warren. It also features Thomas Dolby on synthesisers.
The Angels Wings – The Shape
Modelled into a pair of angels wings around a heart and halo. An angel is a spiritual (without a physical body), heavenly, or supernatural being, usually humanoid with bird-like wings, often depicted as a messenger or intermediary between God (the transcendent) and humanity (the profane) in various traditions like the Abrahamic religions. Other roles include protectors and guides for humans, such as guardian angels and servants of God. In Western belief-systems the term is often used to distinguish benevolent from malevolent intermediary beings.
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