Duet Sensual

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Duet Sensual

Best Duets Ever: 72 Classics For Your Next Karaoke Session

Juice WRLD ft. Halsey - Life's A Mess (Official Visualizer)
A Rockin' Good Way (To Mess Around And Fall In Love)
Isaac Hayes - Ain't That Loving You (For More Reasons Than One)
Kenny Rogers, Kim Carnes - Don't Fall In Love With A Dreamer (Audio)
Elton John - Don't Go Breaking My Heart (with Kiki Dee)
Owl City & Carly Rae Jepsen - Good Time (Official Video)
Shawn Mendes, Camila Cabello - I Know What You Did Last Summer (Official Music Video)
Nelly Furtado - Promiscuous (Official Music Video) ft. Timbaland
Christina Aguilera, Lil' Kim, Mya, Pink - Lady Marmalade (Official Music Video)
Queen - Under Pressure (Official Video)
Method Man ft. Mary J. Blige - All I Need (Razor Sharp Remix) [Official Video]
Andrea Bocelli, Sarah Brightman - Time To Say Goodbye (HD)
Endless Love (From "The Endless Love" Soundtrack)
Best John Cale Songs: Five Essential Tracks Reveal The VU Legend’s Gift
Best Motown Love Songs: 20 Essential Songs For Soulmates
The Tragically Hip: 20 Essential Songs by Canada’s Legendary Rock Poets
Back To The Basement: 10 DIY Music Venues And The Scenes They Launched
Best Billy Currington Songs: 20 Essential Country Anthems
Best New Jack Swing Songs: 40 Party Starting Jams
The Fashion Of Shania Twain: The Queen Of Country Pop
A Change Is Gonna Come: How Gospel Gave Birth To Soul
Tears For Fears, ABBA, And Halsey: Currently Trending Songs
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The best duets of all time. Open your ears, and enjoy the company of two voices, very often singing as one, and always singing brilliantly.
As Marvin Gaye and Kim Weston once sang: “It Takes Two.” Indeed, a pairing of great talents can often lead to truly memorable (and highly profitable) results. Whether it’s a romantic ballad, a tandem melody, or complex, counterpart harmonies, the most successful duets find both artists supporting one another – allowing both parties to excel. From Motown to metal and pop to country, below are some of the best duets of all time.
In 2019, British alt-rocker YUNGBLUD joined American rapper and rock artist Machine Gun Kelly for “I Think I’m OKAY” (off MGK’s Hotel Diablo ). Since then, a well-documented friendship has developed between the two artists, spanning stages, studios, and plenty of bars on both sides of the Atlantic. In 2020, MGK and YUNGBLUD joined forces again for “Acting Like That,” off the British artist’s best-selling LP, Weird! The high-energy track also produced an inspired, pandemic-era music video, in which both artists fend off a zombie apocalypse in their respective cities.
At the turn of the millennium, country music power couple Faith Hill and Tim McGraw paired up for their third duet, “Let’s Make Love,” for Hill’s chart-topping crossover hit, Breathe . The piano-driven ballad not only landed in the Country Top Ten, but earned the husband and wife a Grammy Award in 2001. While Hill and McGraw have continued to perform on each other’s records over the last two decades, they finally released their first collaborative LP, The Rest of Our Life , in 2017.
“You just gotta learn to live and love on,” sings the late Juice WRLD in this poignant duet with Halsey. “Life’s a Mess” finds the duo (who previously collaborated in 2018 on Halsey’s “Without Me”) finding gratitude for their romantic partners while looking back on the difficulties that they’ve faced in life. The song – which appeared on the talented rapper’s record-breaking posthumous album, Legends Never Die – became a Top Ten hit in the US. Months later, an earlier version of the song was released, featuring Juice WRLD with Post Malone.
A former couple realizes how much they miss one another in this multi-platinum crossover hit from country band Lady A . Performed by Hillary Scott and Charles Kelley, the emotive “Need You Now” achieved massive commercial and critical success – topping the Billboard Country chart for five weeks, peaking at No.2 on the Hot 100, and earning the group multiple ACM and Grammy Awards, among others.
In 1966, The Righteous Brothers (aka Bill Medley and Bobby Hatfield) scored their second No.1 pop hit with “(You’re My) Soul and Inspiration” – a lushly-arranged ballad written by the legendary songwriting team of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, who also penned the group’s first chart-topper, “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’.” While the duo had recently parted ways with producer Phil Spector, they worked with arranger Jack Nitzsche to recreate Spector’s popular “Wall of Sound” that defined many of their previous releases.
In 1960, legendary jazz vocalist Dinah Washington and R&B star Brook Benton paired up to record The Two of Us – an album that spawned not one but two chart-topping duets, including this peppy, orchestral number. When it came to success, there was certainly no messing around: “A Rockin’ Good Way” went straight to No.1 on the R&B charts, and peaked at No.7 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Pop fans around the globe were pinching themselves when Britney Spears paired up with Madonna for an iconic performance (and a kiss) at the 2003 MTV Music Awards. Months later, when they released the duet “Me Against the Music,” it was one of the most anticipated moments in pop music history. The dance track, which came about during rehearsals for the award show, marked Spears’ 10th charting single and Madonna’s 50th charting single, and truly proved the power of a cross-generational partnership.
This delectable 2011 dance-pop tune paired Maroon 5 ’s Adam Levine with his fellow judge on The Voice , Christina Aguilera. The duet finds Levine trying to impress Aguilera with his dancing skills, which he compares to the iconic moves of Rolling Stones frontman, Mick Jagger (the song’s melody also takes a cue from the Stones’ disco hit, “Miss You.”) One of the best-selling singles of all-time, “Moves Like Jagger” landed at the top of the charts in nearly 20 countries.
Long before Isaac Hayes was a larger-than-life music icon, he was one-half of a hit-making songwriting team with David Porter at Stax Records. While the pair didn’t write “Ain’t That Loving You” (a Homer Banks/Allen Jones song first recorded by Johnnie Taylor) the two old friends reunited in 1972, when Hayes was at the height of his fame, to cover this soul classic. Smooth as silk, this disco-era track finds the two men singing side by side in funky harmony.
Deeply moving (and yet surprisingly catchy) this duet between James Morrison and Nelly Furtado finds the two stars mourning the end of a relationship. Released in 2008, the song became Morrison’s biggest hit yet, peaking at No.2 on the UK pop charts and landing in the Top five across Europe. Months later, Morrison released a version with singer Ai for the Japanese edition of his album, Songs for You, Truths for Me .
In 1985, Grammy Award-winning jazz artist Diane “Deedles” Schuur paired up with Latin star José Feliciano for several tracks on her delightfully-titled LP, Schuur Thing . The soaring, pop-forward duet “By Design” was a major success for the artists, and helped to make Schuur Thing a Top Ten hit on the Billboard 200.
Captain & Tennille (aka real-life married couple “Captain” Daryl Dragon and Toni Tennille) burst onto the scene in 1975 with one of soft rock’s most iconic duets, “Love Will Keep Us Together.” While they followed with a string of hits over the next five years, they closed out the decade with one of their most successful tracks, “Do That to Me One More Time.” The suggestive tune, penned by Tennille, marked the duo’s second No.1 hit on the US pop charts, as well as their highest-charting song in the UK. It was so popular, in fact, that the duo recorded a Spanish version of the song, “Amame Una Vez Mas.”
This sweet, acoustic duet brought together Country Hall of Famer Don Williams with Americana star Emmylou Harris, who covered the Townes Van Zandt tune on her 1981 LP, Cimarron . The song not only earned the duo multiple nominations at the ACM, CMA, and GRAMMY Awards but also was a No.3 hit on the Billboard Country charts and a No.1 Country hit in Canada.
A year before Kim Carnes became a chart-topping star with “Bette Davis Eyes,” she was an in-demand songwriter who had worked with some of the industry’s biggest acts. In 1980, country star Kenny Rogers hired Carnes to help him write his next project – a concept album revolving around a cowboy, titled Gideon . The LP’s sole single, “Don’t Fall in Love with a Dreamer,” became a crossover hit, landing at No.4 on the Billboard Hot 100, topping the Canadian country chart, and helping to make Carnes a household name.
The Mamas & The Papas frequently covered this 1931 pop standard during their live shows and chose to include it in their fourth studio album (1968’s The Papas & the Mamas ), with “Mama” Cass Elliot on lead vocals. The resulting song (which became a Top 20 hit in the UK and US) was decidedly dreamy, with a touch of vintage flair. In an interview with Melody Maker , Cass shared that she “tried to sing it like it was 1943 and somebody had just come in and said, ‘Here’s a new song.’ I tried to sing it as if it were the first time.”
Originally recorded as a one-off performance for Bing Crosby’s radio show, “Gone Fishin’” with Louis Armstrong was so well-received by audiences that it was released as a single in 1951. The droll duet, which finds two pals calling each other out for escaping life’s obligations for a day of fishing, went on to become a Top 20 hit.
In the 1953 musical The Band Wagon , Fred Astaire and Jack Buchanan don tuxedos and top hats for a charming duet of “I Guess I Have to Change My Plans.” The ballad, which was first used in the 1929 Broadway revue, The Little Show , is about a man discovering that the woman he admired is spoken for. Astaire and Buchanan’s version, meanwhile, slightly changed the meaning of the song – making it from the point of view of two competing suitors. The tune, which has since become a pop standard, would go on to be featured in a variety of films, and covered by numerous artists.
Fiction met reality in this 1976 duet, which paired recently-divorced country stars, George Jones and Tammy Wynette. Written by Buck Owens, the sorrowful break-up song appeared on the former couple’s chart-topping seventh studio album, Golden Ring . In a twist of fate, however, the album was so successful that the two artists continued to work together for the rest of the decade, despite their particularly contentious divorce.
It’s impossible not to smile when you hear “Don’t Go Breaking My Heart,” the playful, 1976 duet from Elton John and Kiki Dee. The Ivor Novello-winning song, which marked the first UK No.1 for both artists, was written as a hat-tip to the classic Motown-era duets by John and his longtime collaborator, Bernie Taupin (under the pseudonyms “Ann Orson” and “Carte Blanche”).
In this Billy Edd Wheeler/Jerry Leiber song, a husband fantasizes about going to the unspecified city of “Jackson,” where he’ll get into all sorts of trouble. His wife, meanwhile, has a more realistic view of what will happen. In 1967, real-life married couple Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash turned the tune into a Grammy-winning country hit, while just a few months later, Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazelwood offered their own rendition. Although it’s still unclear where this mythical “Jackson” is…the song is decidedly a classic.
While it’s hard to imagine “Telephone” being performed by anyone other than Lady Gaga and Beyoncé, the Gaga-penned global hit was actually intended for Britney Spears. Although Spears certainly would have made it her own, Queen Bey and Gaga poured their star power into the dance-pop tune to make it an epic hit, complete with a nine-and-a-half-minute short film/music video.
When Brazilian bandleader Sergio Mendes was in search of a ballad to add to his 1983 self-titled album, he turned to the celebrated husband-and-wife songwriting duo of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, whose “Never Gonna Let You Go” hit the spot. Mendes enlisted singers Joe Pizzulo and Leeza Miller to perform the soaring tune and wrote a complex arrangement of chord progressions to accompany them. Released as a single that spring, “Never Gonna Let You Go” spent four weeks at the top of the Adult Contemporary chart in the US, and became a massive hit in Brazil, among other territories. Today, it remains one of Mendes’ most successful songs.
In 1991, the popular Italian singer-songwriter Zucchero paired up with British artist Paul Young for an English-language version of his song “Senza una donna (Without a Woman).” Not only did the bluesy ballad introduce Zucchero to an American audience, but it made the singer an international star, topping the charts in several European countries and landing in the Top 10 in Korea, the UK, and Brazil, among other territories.
In 2012, Owl City (the electronica project of singer-songwriter Adam Young) and Carly Rae Jepsen partnered for the anthem of the summer – the aptly named “Good Time.” The joyful, high-energy dance track reverberated on beaches and in clubs across the globe – hitting No.1 in South Korea, Canada, and New Zealand, among other territories.
When Gram Parsons embarked on a solo career, following the dissolution of the Flying Burrito Brothers, one of his first tasks was finding a female collaborator. His former bandmate, Chris Hillman, recommended a rising country singer named Emmylou Harris. While their time together was brief (cut short by Parsons’ untimely death in 1973), they produced a variety of incredible songs together – and plenty of sweet harmonies, as heard in this incredible cover of “Love Hurts,” which appeared on Parsons’ posthumous Grievous Angel . Harris, meanwhile, would go on to dominate the Americana scene and become a celebrated artist in her own right.
In 1962, R&B and jazz singer-songwriter Ray Charles expanded his range with the hugely popular Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music . 22 years later, he revisited the genre on Friendship , which found him partnering with country music’s biggest stars. Among the album’s highlights was “Seven Spanish Angels” with Willie Nelson, which tells the dramatic tale of an outlaw and his girlfriend. The song hit No.1 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and became Charles’ most successful hit in the genre.
When Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant partnered with bluegrass star Alison Krauss for a duet album (2007’s Raising Sand ), many were surprised at the unlikely pairing. The results, however, were magical, earning the pair universal acclaim and countless awards. Their yearning, melancholic rendition of “Please Read the Letter” (Plant’s 1998 duet with his former bandmate, Jimmy Page) was one of the album’s standout tracks and was later named Record of the Year at the Grammys.
While “Señorita” wasn’t Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello’s first duet together (2015’s “I Know What You Did Last Summer” was), the steamy duet did spark a romance between the real-life couple. The song, which appeared on Mendes’ 2018 self-titled album and Cabello’s Romance LP (2019), became one of the hottest songs of the summer, hitting No.1 in over 35 countries: from the US to Brazil and China to Russia.
The first-and-only father-daughter duet to hit No.1 in the US, Frank and Nancy Sinatra ’s rendition of “Somethin’ Stupid” became a massive hit for both generations of the talented family in 1967. While the song (penned by folk artist Carson Parks) raised a few eyebrows with its romantic lyrics, the Sinatras had the last laugh – earning a gold record and a Grammy nod for their endearing performance.
Bryan Adams and Mel C. (aka Sporty Spice) capture that feeling of realizing how much you care about a significant other when they’re not with you in this 1998 single. The catchy duet appeared on Adams’ eighth studio album, On a Day Like Today , and became a Top Ten hit across the UK, Europe, Canada, and Australia.
While Stevie Nicks originally wrote “Leather and Lace” for Waylon Jennings and Jessi Colter’s album of the same name, the song never made it to the LP. Instead, Nicks (who was still a member of Fleetwood Mac) recorded the ballad with her then-boyfriend, Don Henley (who had recently departed the Eagles), for her solo debut, Bella Donna . The tender song peaked at No.6 on the Billboard Hot 100 and helped to secure both Nicks and Henley as bona fide solo stars.
In the early 70s, Motown artists Marvin Gaye and Diana Ross were two of music’s biggest stars, so it was a natural move when the label paired them up for a duet album. 1973’s Diana & Marvin spawned several singles, including a cover of the soulful ballad, “Stop, Look, Listen (To Your Heart)” – first made famous by the Stylistics. Featuring heartfelt performances by both artists, the song was released as a single in the UK, where it became a Top 40 hit.
In the mid-50s, brothers Don and Phil Everly rose to fame with their country-influenced rock’n’roll duets, including hits like “Bye Bye Love,” All I Have to Do Is Dream,” and “Wake Up Little Susie.” But their biggest hit was 1960’s “Cathy’s Clown,” which tells the tale of a man who is played by his girlfriend. The unusually structured song – which opens with a chorus and has no actual verses – went on to influence some of music’s biggest pop acts (including the Beatles) was later added to the Library of Congress’s National Recording Registry.
Written as the theme to 1982’s An Officer and a Gentleman by celebrated songwriters Jack Nitzsche, Buffy Sainte-Marie, and Will Jennings, this soaring, romantic duet between Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes (who later went on to record Dirty Dancing ’s hit theme song) was a defining song of the decade. The platinum-certified hit landed at the top of the pop charts in the US, Australia, and South Africa, among other territories, and went on to win a Grammy, an Academy Award, and a Golden Globe.
In 2013, Colbie Caillat and Gavin DeGraw wrote this poignant duet for the romantic thriller, Safe Haven . Mirroring the love story between the film’s main characters, Caillat and DeGraw’s song captures the feelings of two people who are trying to move forward while letting go of difficult moments in their pasts.
This classic duet is the result of, quite possibly, one of the very first memes. In the mid-70s, Neil Diamond wrote “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers” as the theme song to a TV show called All that Glitters . While the song was never used on the show, Diamond recorded it for his 1977 LP, “I’m Glad You’re Here with Me Tonight.” One year later, Barbara Streisand covered the song on her album, Songbird . That inspired a DJ to edit together his own version of a “duet” between the two stars. What began as a one-off bit turned into a craze across the country, inspiring countless other stations to do the same. Finally, Streisand and Diamond recorded a proper duet of the song, much to the delight of fans. Released in October 1978, the platinum-selling “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers Anymore” went to No.1, and resulted in a must-see live performance by the pair at the 1980 Grammys.
Long before they became a couple, Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello paired up for this 2015 duet. The dramatic song was written during a backstage jam session, when Mendes was on tour with Taylor Swift and Cabello, along with Fifth Harmony, visited for a guest performance. The Top 20 hit marked Cabello’s debut single as a solo artist, as well as the lead single off Mendes’ Handwritten Revisited .
It’s unique when two of music’s biggest stars happen to come from the same family…and when they pair up
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