she had two top forty hits in 1986
True Colors went to number one
Change of Heart went to number three
his first top ten hit was his first RCA victor release Heartbreak Hotel
Dolly Parton's First UK Top Ten hit was Jolene back in 1976.
What You Need
Boderline
"Tell it to my heart"-1987
Cyndi Lauper is an American singer. She was most famous during her debut when four of her songs managed to reach the top five hits position on the Billboard Top 100, making her the first female artist to achieve this.
his first top ten hit was his first RCA victor release Heartbreak Hotel
Dolly Parton's First UK Top Ten hit was Jolene back in 1976.
What You Need
I Need You
Boderline
see the top brick on the right hit that first see the top bomb thing hit that second
Madonna's first top 40 hit was "Holiday" in December, 1983 No It's Not^ It's Like a Virgin in 1984
see the top brick on the right hit that first see the top bomb thing hit that second
"Tell it to my heart"-1987
They never hit the top 100, at least through 1999.
"Girls Just Want to Have Fun" was the first of four songs from Cyndi Lauper's 1983 album, She's So Unusual, to hit Billboard Magazine's Top 100s chart. The single peaked at #2, stayed there for two weeks, then dropped out of the Top Ten but lingered lower in the Top 100 for another 23 weeks. It also reached the #2 position in the UK, and was a Top Ten hit in a total of 15 countries, peaking at #1 in several. "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" was later RIAA certified Platinum.The LP, She's So Unusual, was a worldwide smash, selling 16 million copies and remaining on the Top 40 charts for more than 65 weeks. Lauper had four consecutive Top 5 hits from this album in 1983 and 1984."Girls Just Want to Have Fun" was written and recorded by Robert Hazard in 1979, but Cyndi Lauper made it famous. Since 1984, more than 30 artists have covered the song, including Miley Cyrus, Pearl Jam, and Alvin & the Chipmunks.Cyndi, herself, released a Reggae-style arrangement of "Girls..." in 1994, on her album Twelve Deadly Cyns...and then some, but the single only peaked at #87 on the U.S. charts.