"Someday We'll Be Together" was released as a single and peaked at #7 on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play charts (April 1994).
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Six tracks were reworked by some of the biggest names in the industry at the time and cover Ross' career as a solo artist and as a member of The Supremes, with Frankie Knuckles updating "Someday We'll Be Together" from 1969.
"Someday We'll Be Together" was the final number at Diana Ross & the Supremes' farewell concert on January 14, 1970 at the Frontier Hotel in Las Vegas.
In her second autobiography Supreme Faith: Someday We'll Be Together, Mary Wilson recalls other songs being performed as latter day singles by the group such as "You're My Driving Wheel", "He's My Man" and "You're What's Missing In My Life".
"Someday We'll Be Together", a 1961 R&B/soul song, notably covered by Diana Ross & the Supremes in 1969
Someday We'll Be Together | I Know It's Gonna Happen Someday | The Someday Funnies | Supreme Faith: Someday We'll Be Together | Someday (You'll Want Me to Want You) | Someday This Pain Will Be Useful To You | Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You | Someday Man | Someday Angeline | I'm Gonna Be a Wheel Someday | Gonna Get You Someday |
Peddle forward to 1993, the Frankie Knuckles mix of "Someday We'll Be Together" would become the lead single from Diana's retrospective box set, "Forever Diana: Musical Memoirs".
The third single released, "We'll Be Together", was another German Top 10 hit, while the fourth single, "Around My Heart", peaked at number 11.
The song was also covered by Mandy Moore and Jon Foreman on the A Walk to Remember soundtrack, by Hall & Oates on their 2003 album Do It for Love and live by Ronan Keating during his 2002 tour, Destination Everywhere.
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The single did not fare as well as the previous single, in part due to the announcement of lead member of the band Gregg Alexander stating that the New Radicals "would no longer be a recording, promoting, or performing entity" and that he would focus on producing and writing material for other artists.
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Alexander sings, "The decency league, Dedicated to stopping all sexual behaviour/I'm merely trying to deprive all those of the reasonable use of their sexual organs".
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It was released in May 1999 as the second single off their album Maybe You've Been Brainwashed Too and the follow-up to the smash "You Get What You Give".
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Directed by David Barnblatt, the video features the whole band playing the song in a damp warehouse with Gregg Alexander on guitar.
(Motown singer/songwriter Johnny Bristol also co-wrote The Supremes'final hit with Diana Ross, "Someday We'll Be Together").