Graham Russell and Russell Hitchcock built a career on straightforward romantic ballads.
For a quick sense of their sound, 'Making Love Out Of Nothing At All' and 'Every Woman In The World' frame it well. They're both from that early '80s run where their approach really clicked.
Air Supply's songs like 'Every Woman In The World' and 'Making Love Out Of Nothing At All' defined a certain kind of 1980s soft rock. They connected with a wide audience through uncomplicated, sentimental ballads, even as that style drew some criticism. Their music from that period remains recognizable for its earnest, adult contemporary feel.
The duo formed in Australia in 1975 and had their debut album out by 1976. They hit their commercial stride in the early 1980s with a string of hits, then kept recording and performing through later decades with various supporting lineups, like when guitarist David Moyse joined in the late 1990s.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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