Watch the video, get the download or listen to The Corrs – What Can I Do to Make You Love Me for free. Discover more music, gig and concert tickets, videos, lyrics. The Corrs - What can I do Letra traducida de What can I do - The Corrs. 52,032 Visitas panzas. 19694 canciones. What can I do to make you love me. "What Can I Do" is a song by Irish band The Corrs, from their breakthrough album Talk on Corners (1998). The song was originally released in January 1998.
Talk on Corners - Wikipedia. Talk on Corners. Studio album by The Corrs. Released. 24 October 1.
Recorded. July 1. May 1. 99. 7Studio. Various. Ollywood Studio, Hollywood. Chartmaker, Inc., Malibu. Westland Studios, Dublin. Rafelson Recording Studio, Los Angeles.
Lyrics to 'What Can I Do' by The Corrs. What can I do to make you love me What can I do to make you care What can I say to make you feel this.
Peak Studios, Dublin. Record Plant, Los Angeles.
Mulhulland Studio, Los Angeles. A& M Studios, Los Angeles. Aerowave Studios, Los Angeles. Windmill Lane Studios, Dublin. Genre. Length. 56: 5.
What Can I Do (To Make You Love Me) This song is by The Corrs and appears on the album Talk On.
Label. Producer. The Corrs chronology. Singles from Talk on Corners. Talk on Corners is the second studio album by Irishpop rock band The Corrs. It was released on 2. October 1. 99. 7 in Ireland and on 5 May 1.
United States by 1. Lava and Atlantic Records. Preceded by lead single "Only When I Sleep", which became a top ten hit internationally, the album was an immediate commercial success in several territories, including Ireland, Spain, Sweden, Denmark, Australia, New Zealand and Japan. Its commercial performance elsewhere was initially modest, however. The Corrs' entire concert from the Royal Albert Hall was broadcast live on BBC One on Saint Patrick's Day in 1.
Dreams" by Fleetwood Mac drummer Mick Fleetwood. This event did much to raise the band's international profile. A remixed version of "Dreams" went on to become their first top ten hit on the UK Singles Chart. The record was reissued the following month to include the song as a bonus track. This would be the first of several different editions of Talk on Corners to be released over the album's two year- long promotional cycle. Over this period, the band released a string of increasingly successful hit singles, culminating with a Tin Tin Out remix of "Runaway" peaking at number two in the UK. The Corrs also toured extensively to promote the record: the "Talk on Corners World Tour" saw them perform almost 1.
The album spent ten weeks at number one in the UK. On one of these weeks, previous album Forgiven, Not Forgotten reached a new peak of number two, making The Corrs the first act since The Beatles to simultaneously occupy the top two positions of the UK Albums Chart. It ended 1. 99. 8 as the highest- selling album of the year, and remains one of the best- selling albums of all time there, as well as the highest- selling album ever by an Irish act. Background and recording[edit]The Corrs began work on new material in California in July 1.
David Foster. Lead vocalist Andrea Corr has described the making of Talk on Corners as being "a struggle", with the band put under pressure by Atlantic Records to deliver a successful follow- up to their 1. Forgiven, Not Forgotten. Their manager John Hughes cited second album syndrome as a common source of pressure for all recording artists, but said further demands came from the label, who were concerned that none of the songs they were being presented with seemed like potential hit singles. The label disliked "What Can I Do" and "So Young", particularly the latter, and the band had to fight hard for their inclusion on the album.[1]Additional co- writers and producers were brought in to help improve the album's hit potential, including Carole Bayer Sager, Glen Ballard, Oliver Leiber, Rick Nowels and Billy Steinberg. The use of different producers on different tracks introduced further difficulties: the band found it hard to achieve consistency throughout the entire album, although this would be remedied by the Corrs using over forty hours of studio time to record overdubs.
In May 1. 99. 7, the finalised album was delivered to Atlantic, who were unimpressed by the material and ordered the band to continue recording new tracks. When they refused, the label threatened to sue the band for breach of contract.
This dispute was only resolved when John Hughes signed a contract guaranteeing future album sales, with the manager being held personally liable if Talk on Corners failed to yield a profit for Atlantic.[1]Composition and style[edit]Talk on Corners is predominantly a pop rock album, although it also incorporates elements of Celtic and traditional Irish music. Andrea Corr was the album's primary lyricist, co- writing numerous songs with established composers and producers: she co- wrote "Queen of Hollywood" with Glen Ballard, best known for co- writing Michael Jackson's "Man in the Mirror" (1.
Alanis Morissette album Jagged Little Pill (1. Intimacy" was co- written by Pat Benatar guitarist Neil Giraldo, and Billy Steinberg—the writer of hit singles including Madonna's "Like a Virgin" (1.
Eternal Flame" (1. The Bangles. Several songs on the record were co- written and produced by Oliver Leiber, the son of composer Jerry Leiber who – alongside Mike Stoller – co- wrote some of the biggest hits of the fifties and sixties, including Elvis Presley's "Hound Dog" (1. Jailhouse Rock" (1. Ben E. King's "Stand By Me" (1. Their cover of the Jimi Hendrix song "Little Wing" features Irish folk collective The Chieftains. The album's title is derived from a lyric in the song "Queen of Hollywood".[2][3]Critical reception[edit]The record received generally positive reviews from music critics. All. Music writer Becky Byrkit rated it four stars out of five and praised the band for their vocal harmonies, as well as the album's consistency, writing that "each and every cut sounds wired for radio play".
She highlighted their cover of "Little Wing" as being the album's "best and most spirited Celtic cut".[4] Stephen Segerman of South African music magazine Rock rated the album eight out of ten, and complimented it for incorporating a "fuller and rockier atmosphere [than Forgiven, Not Forgotten]. He also praised the record for containing "generous sprinklings of traditional Irish sounds and touches", which he said helped enhance the material.[3]The special edition of the album received mixed reviews from the American music press.
James Hunter of Rolling Stone criticised Ballard's production on "Queen of Hollywood" for "forcing an Alanis- like edge where it's unneeded", and called the David Foster- produced tracks "goofy", but said that "Otherwise, this is a high- flying reintroduction to some blue chip popsters."[5] A writer for People was critical of the re- release, as well as the remixed tracks, calling it "A collection of pretty, pop- lite tunes that could use more Celtic flavoring and less studio gloss, the album is best when harking back to the sounds of the Old Sod: reeling fiddles, soaring harmonies and the haunting tin whistle played by sister Andrea. Her lead vocals are as pretty to listen to as she and her sisters are to look at, but the string- sweetened arrangements are as bland and flat as a Dublin car park."[6]British rock magazine NME have retrospectively been highly critical of the album, placing it at number three in their 2. The album also appeared in a 2. UK [which] have no redeeming features whatsoever".[8]Release and commercial performance[edit]The original edition of the album was released internationally from October 1. Within five months of release, Talk on Corners had sold over a million copies worldwide, and was certified sextuple platinum in their home country, as well as double platinum in Australia and Spain, platinum in Denmark and New Zealand, and gold in both Japan and Sweden.[9] Its commercial success elsewhere was initially modest, however, with the album debuting at number 2.
France and at number 5. Germany.[1. 0][1. In the UK, it debuted at number 7, but would fall out of the top forty there within a month of release.[1. Only When I Sleep" and "I Never Loved You Anyway" were released as the album's first two singles, with the former becoming a top ten hit in Ireland,[1. Australian Singles Chart.[1.
What Can I Do" was released as the album's third single, and also went on to be a top forty hit in Ireland.[1. All three singles failed to reach the top forty of the UK Singles Chart.[1. Fleetwood Mac drummer Mick Fleetwood joined the band at their concert in the Royal Albert Hall on 1. March 1. 99. 8 during their performance of "Dreams", which the band had recently contributed to the album Legacy: A Tribute to Fleetwood Mac's Rumours.
The entire concert was broadcast live on BBC One as part of that organisation's coverage of Saint Patrick's Day, and the event did much to raise the band's profile.[9] The cover would become the Corrs' first top forty hit in the UK, after it peaked at number six.[1. The following month, Talk on Corners was reissued in numerous territories with "Dreams" included as a bonus track, and the album finally peaked at number one in the UK on 2. June 1. 99. 8, its 3. This edition of the album was the first to be released in the United States. It was released on May 5,[9] and peaked at number 1. Billboard's Top Heatseekers Albums.[1. The Corrs: Live at the Royal Albert Hall was released in August.
Talk on Corners: Special Edition[edit]A special edition of the record was released internationally from November 1. This revised edition contained five remixed tracks, several of which were then released or re- released as singles. The previously released remix of "Dreams" by Todd Terry was included, along with a previously unreleased K- Klass remix of "So Young", as well as an alternate mix of "I Never Loved You Anyway", which was created by The Corrs. English electronic music duo Tin Tin Out remixed a further two tracks: "What Can I Do" and "Runaway"—a song from their debut album. Tin Tin Out enlisted European string ensemble the Duke Quartet to provide orchestration for both tracks. The former would go on to become the Corrs' first top three hit in the UK when it was released as a single,[1. Runaway" became their highest- peaking single yet, after it peaked at number two behind Britney Spears' "..
Baby One More Time".[1. Dreams", "So Young", "What Can I Do" and "Runaway" have all been certified silver by the BPI for sales in excess of 2.
As of 2. 01. 7, "What Can I Do" and "Runaway" have sold 3. UK, respectively.[1.
What Can I Do - The Corrs. I haven't slept at all in days. It's been so long since we have talked. And I have been here many times. I just don't know what i'm doing wrong.
Chorus: What can I do to make you love me? What can I do to make you care? What can I say to make you feel this? What can I do to get you there?
There's only so much I can take. And i just got to let it go. And who knows I might feel better. If I don't try and I don't hope(Chorus)No more waiting, no more aching,No more fighting, no more trying..
Maybe there's nothing more to say. And in a funny way I'm calm. Because the power is not mine. I'm just gonna let it fly(chorus)Love me..