"What You Get Is What You See" Released: February 1987
"Girls" Released: February 1987 (EU)
"Break Every Rule" Released: April 1987
"Back Where You Started" Released: 1987 (Can)
"Paradise Is Here" Released: September 1987 (EU)
"Afterglow" Released: October 1987 (US)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source
Rating
AllMusic
[2]
Robert Christgau
B+[3]
Break Every Rule is the sixth solo studio album by Tina Turner. It was released on September 8, 1986, through Capitol Records.[4] It was the follow-up to Turner's globally successful comeback album, Private Dancer, released two years earlier. Turner nearly scored her second Billboard Hot 100 number one with the lead single "Typical Male", peaking at number two for three consecutive weeks in October 1986, while "Two People" and "What You Get Is What You See" reached the top 20. "Back Where You Started" earned Turner her third consecutive Grammy Award for Best Rock Vocal Performance, Female in 1987. It is her first solo album of original songs.[5]
^Strong, Martin Charles (1995). The Great Rock Discography. Canongate Press. p. 847. ISBN 9780862415419.
BreakEveryRule is the sixth solo studio album by Tina Turner. It was released on September 8, 1986, through Capitol Records. It was the follow-up to...
BreakEveryRule World Tour is the sixth concert tour by singer Tina Turner. The tour supported her sixth solo album BreakEveryRule (1986). It was sponsored...
Best", "I Don't Wanna Fight", and "GoldenEye". She embarked on the BreakEveryRule World Tour (1987–1988), which became the top-grossing female tour of...
You See" is a song by recording artist Tina Turner from her album BreakEveryRule (1986). The 12" single included three versions of the song, the Extended...
international hit. She then released her second album for Capitol in 1986, BreakEveryRule, which also spawned major hits on the US Hot 100, including "Typical...
and Graham Lyle and produced by the former for Turner's studio album BreakEveryRule (1986). The song hit number one in Cash Box magazine and just missed...
written by Paul Brady and first recorded by Tina Turner, for her album BreakEveryRule. Brady subsequently released his own version on his 1987 album Primitive...
from Turner's BreakEveryRule World Tour but also from the 1985 Private Dancer Tour, as well as the 1986 Tina Turner: BreakEveryRule HBO special recorded...
A second live recording of the track from Tina Turner's 1986/1987 BreakEveryRule Tour, with Clapton guesting on guitar and vocals, was later included...
States by rock/soul singer Tina Turner, from her Platinum-certified BreakEveryRule album. The song was written by Bryan Adams and Jim Vallance, and produced...
Of Tina!". Disc and Music Echo: 10. Bego, Mark (2005). Tina Turner: BreakEveryRule (first ed.). Taylor Trade Pub. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-4616-2602-2. OCLC 820849114...
(2016) Knife Aztec Camera (1984) She's the Boss Mick Jagger (1985) BreakEveryRule Tina Turner (1986) Save the Last Dance for Me Ben E. King (1987) Land...
soundtrack) (1985) "Typical Male" (with Tina Turner and Phil Collins from BreakEveryRule) (1986) "I Still Believe" (from The Lost Boys soundtrack) (1987) "Tonight"...
1988 live version of the song, released as single in Europe, from her BreakEveryRule world tour. The single received positive reviews. A reviewer for Cash...
December 9, 2020 – via Daniel Durchholz. Bego, Mark (2005). Tina Turner: BreakEveryRule. Lanham, Maryland: Taylor Trade Publishing. p. 62. ISBN 1461626021...
1986) Back in the High Life – Steve Winwood (Island Records, 1986) BreakEveryRule – Tina Turner (Capitol Records, 1986) King of America – Elvis Costello...
performance at Camden Palace in London (later broadcast live) during her BreakEveryRule World Tour. A parody of Max appeared in an episode of Sledge Hammer...
highest break that can be made under normal circumstances is 147. To achieve it, the player must pot all 15 reds, with the black after every red, followed...
August 10, 2020. White 2003, p. 17. Bego, Mark (2013). Tina Turner: BreakEveryRule. p. 18. "Six musicians who influenced Elvis Presley". PBS, American...
release True Blue. That year he photographed Tina Turner for the album BreakEveryRule. During the 1980s and 1990s, Ritts photographed celebrities in various...