Artist's albums
Orleans
1973 · album
Dance With Me: The Best Of Orleans
1997 · compilation
Still The One
1990 · album
Grown Up Children
1986 · album
Still The One / Siam Sam [Digital 45]
1976 · single
Waking & Dreaming
1976 · album
Jinglin' in New England
2022 · single
New Star Shining
2021 · single
New Star Shining
2021 · album
Mary's Christmas
2021 · single
Home
2020 · single
Still the One (Applebee's Theme)
2020 · single
Work at Home With Orleans
2020 · album
Love Takes Time (Nashville Mix)
2020 · single
Dancing In The Moonlight
2020 · single
Let There Be Music
1975 · album
Let There Be Music (Live)
2019 · single
Love Takes Time 10 Authorized Hits By Orleans
2019 · album
No More Than You Can Handle: A 46-Year Journey
2018 · album
Dancing in the Moonlight
2018 · single
Analog Men
2016 · album
Orleans
2008 · single
Obscurities
2008 · album
The Essentials: Orleans
2003 · album
Similar artists
Dan Fogelberg
Artist
Player
Artist
Ambrosia
Artist
Nicolette Larson
Artist
Starbuck
Artist
Bob Welch
Artist
Firefall
Artist
Stephen Bishop
Artist
Robbie Dupree
Artist
Pablo Cruise
Artist
Gary Wright
Artist
Looking Glass
Artist
Little River Band
Artist
Paul Davis
Artist
Seals and Crofts
Artist
Captain & Tennille
Artist
Loggins & Messina
Artist
Biography
Best known for their hits "Still the One" and "Dance with Me," Orleans were founded in New York in 1972 by John Hall, Larry Hoppen, and Wells Kelly. Hoppen's brother Lance joined before the group signed with ABC Records in 1973; working with producers Barry Beckett and Roger Hawkins at Muscle Shoals Studios, they released their self-titled debut later that year. In 1974 Orleans recorded a self-produced album in New York's Bearsville Studio, but ABC didn't like it and dropped the group from the label, leaving Asylum to release the album Let There Be Music in 1974, spurring the group's first big hit, 1975's "Dance with Me." Their album Waking and Dreaming contained the hit "Still the One," which ABC-TV used as a theme song for that year. In 1977, Hall, who wrote many of the group's hits with his wife Johanna, left the group to pursue a solo career. He recorded two solo albums after signing with Elektra Records, and became something of a spokesman for the antinuclear power movement, helping to organize a group called MUSE (Musicians United for Safe Energy). Hall eventually worked with Jackson Browne, Graham Nash, and Bonnie Raitt to organize the No Nukes concerts at Madison Square Garden in 1979. Without Hall, Orleans went through several other personnel changes before they had a number 11 hit with "Love Takes Time," from the album Forever. Though MCA's Infinity label went bankrupt in 1980, the group persevered, performing together in clubs and releasing the album One of a Kind in 1982. In 1984 Kelly died in London of a heroin overdose, and by the early '90s Hall ditched his solo career and returned to performing with Orleans. After the group released 1994's Orleans Live, Vol. 1, and 1995's Analog Men on its own Major record label, Hall and the Hoppen brothers toured on and off during the rest of the '90s and 2000s. Hall later left the band to pursue a seat in the U.S. Congress, which he won in 2006 and was re-elected to in 2008 before losing it in 2010. Amidst plans to integrate Hall back into the band, Larry Hoppen died in the summer of 2012. ~ Richard Skelly, Rovi