A new song by Tina Turner called “Hot for You Baby," which had previously been unreleased prior to her death on May 24, 2023, will soon be making its debut on the 40th anniversary edition release of her fifth studio album 'Private Dancer.
Listen to the previously unheard Hot For You Baby, which comes from the 40th anniversary edition of Tina Turner's classic Private Dancer album
Tina Turner recorded a cover of John Paul Young’s 1980 single ‘Hot For You Baby’ but it didn’t make the ‘Private Dancer’ album … until now.
"To hear that leonine roar once more is always a pleasure." This post appeared first in Mamasuncut - visit the original post here: Tina Turner's rediscovered song ‘Hot For You, Baby' set for posthumo
A previously lost Tina Turner song is set to be released for the first time, nearly two years after the legendary singer's death. Hot For You Baby, originally intended for Turner's breakthrough 1984 album Private Dancer,
The uptempo "Private Dancer" outtake will appear on the upcoming 40th anniversary edition of the late rock icon's career-peak album.
The new track, “Hot for You Baby,” was “thought to be lost to time” but has now been “unearthed from the vaults” in a “thrilling discovery,” her record company said in a blurb posted on Turner’s official YouTube channel.
A song written by Australians George Young and Harry Vanda and recorded for Tina Turner’s classic album, Private Dancer, has been found 40 years after it was presumably lost.
"Hot For You Baby," a new and unheard track from the late Tina Turner will appear on a 40th anniversary release of 'Private Dancer.'
Tina Turner's lost song from the album Private Dancer has been rediscovered.A long-lost , Hot For You, Baby, originally recorded for her iconic 1984 album Private Dancer, has been rediscovered
Recorded in 1984 for the late diva’s classic album, this newly unearthed lung-buster could pass for a particularly banal Billy Idol b-side
A lost song from Tina Turner’s 1984 album Private Dancer has been found. The track, “Hot for You, Baby,” premiered this morning on the BBC’s Radio 2 Breakfast Show, marking its first public play.