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Jennifer Warnes | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | January 1977 | |||
Recorded | May 1975 - ? 1976 at the Village Recorder, July 1976 at Davlen Sound Studios | |||
Genre | Rock, pop, country rock, folk rock | |||
Length | 38:45 | |||
Label | Arista | |||
Producer | Jim Price, Jim Ed Norman | |||
Jennifer Warnes chronology | ||||
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Singles from Jennifer Warnes | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [2] |
Jennifer Warnes is the fourth album by American singer/songwriter Jennifer Warnes and her first credited as Jennifer Warnes: released in January 1977 as her inaugural Arista Records album, the disc generated Warnes' first Billboard Hot 100 single 'Right Time of the Night' which also ranked on the Billboard hit listings of C&W and Easy Listening tracks, with 'Right Time...' reaching #1 on the latter: [3] a second single: 'I'm Dreaming', also reached the Easy Listening Top Ten.[4]
Jennifer Warnes had been signed by Arista Records president Clive Davis in April 1975[5] on the recommendation of Jim Price, and from May 1975 Price oversaw sessions - at the Village Recorder in west-LA - for tracks intended for Warnes' inaugural Arista album.[6] Price, producing Warnes sporadically as his work schedule permitted - (Jennifer Warnes quote:) '[Price was] producing,...arranging, singing, engineering, playing horns and so forth [for various artists]'[7] - , could not present Clive Davis with the completed tracks Price intended to comprise Warnes' inaugural Arista album until the summer of 1976.[8]
Davis' reaction to the intended album for Warnes was (Clive Davis quote): 'It was a good enough album but it didn't have anything on it that could give her the hit single she needs',[8] and Davis resultantly recruited Jim Ed Norman to produce two tracks to supplement Price's work, with Norman overseeing Warnes' sessions for the tracks 'Right Time of the Night' and 'I'm Dreamin' at Davlen Sound Studios in July 1976.[7][9](Jennifer Warnes quote:): 'Clive picked 'I'm Dreaming' and 'Right Time of the Night', and he brought in Jim Ed Norman...to give those songs very explicit tracks'[10]- Norman, who had been a member of Don Henley's pre-Eagles band Shiloh, having overseen string arrangements for the Eagles' albums Desperado and One of These Nights and also having arranged strings for Linda Ronstadt's version of 'Desperado' (album Don't Cry Now/ 1973). (Jennifer Warnes quote:):'Because of the amount of money Linda Ronstadt was making for Asylum [Records] Arista pretty much saw me as [their] ticket [to similar success].'[11]
Clive Davis also assigned Val Garay to mix 'Right Time of the Night' and 'I'm Dreaming' and also remix Warnes' Jim Price-produced tracks: Garay had mixed the Linda Ronstadt albums Heart Like a Wheel and Prisoner in Disguise and around the time of his work on the Jennifer Warnes album was working on Ronstadt's album Hasten Down the Wind. The production costs of the Jim Price sessions with Jennifer Warnes had totaled $60,000: the recording of the two supplementary tracks: 'Right Time...' and 'I'm Dreaming', plus the expenditure for the Garay remix upped the production costs of the Jennifer Warnes album to a $115,000 total.[8]
After scheduling the Jennifer Warnes album for August 1976 release,[12] Davis elected to hold back release until the new year, deeming Warnes' album likely to be lost in the holiday season sales boom:[8] both the album and its lead single 'Right Time of the Night' would in fact be released 1 January 1977 with the Jennifer Warnes album debuting at #189 on the Billboard 200 album chart dated 26 February 1977, which week 'Right Time of the Night' entered the Top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 en route to a #6 peak that May with the Jennifer Warnes album peaking at #43 the same month.[13]
Track listing[edit]
- 'Love Hurts' (Boudleaux Bryant) – 3:20
- 'Round and Round' (Daniel Moore) – 4:41
- 'Shine a Light' (Mick Jagger, Keith Richards) – 4:12
- 'You're the One' (Steve Ferguson) – 4:22
- 'I'm Dreaming' (Richard Kerr, Gary Osborne) – 3:32
- 'Mama' (Steve Ferguson) – 2:11
- 'Right Time of the Night' (Peter McCann) – 2:55
- 'Bring Ol' Maggie Back Home' (Daniel Moore) – 4:29
- 'Don't Lead Me On' (Doug Haywood) – 2:58
- 'Daddy Don't Go' (Jennifer Warnes) – 4:54
- 'O God of Loveliness (O Bello Dio Del Paradiso)' (Alphonsus Liguori, Edmund Vaughan) – 1:11
Personnel[edit]
- Jennifer Warnes – vocals, background vocals
- Peggy Sandvig – piano, electric piano
- Dave McDaniel – bass
- Jay Graydon – guitar
- Jim Price – electric piano, organ, trombone, background vocals
- Jim Horn – flute, English horn, alto saxophone
- Nicky Hopkins – piano
- Russ Kunkel – drums
- Danny Kortchmar – guitar
- Doug Livingston – piano, steel guitar
- John Leslie Hug – guitar
- Joe Correro – drums
- Alan Lindgren – piano
- Brian Whitcomb – keyboards
- Kenny Edwards – guitar
- Dan Sawyer – guitar
- Doug Rhone – guitar
- Ben Benay – guitar
- Reinie Press – bass
- Michael Bowden – bass
- Dennis St. John – drums
- Matt Betton – drums
- Ralph Humphrey – drums
- Gayle Levant – harp
- Laudir de Oliveira – percussion
- Steve Madaio – trumpet
- Skip Mesquite – tenor saxophone
- Max Haskett – trumpet
- Herb Pedersen – background vocals
- Doug Haywood, Daniel Moore, Matthew Moore, Jim Moore, Beth Fitchet Wood – background vocals
- James Getzoff, Ray Kelley, Sid Sharp, Bill Kerausch - strings
References[edit]
- ^Ruhlmann, William. Jennifer Warnes at AllMusic. Retrieved August 17, 2015.
- ^Larkin, Colin (1999). The Virgin Encyclopedia Of Popular Music, Concise 3rd Edition, p. 1286. Virgin Books, London. ISBN1-85227-832-3
- ^Whitburn, Joel (2000). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, 7th Edition, p. 667. Billboard Books, New York. ISBN0-8230-7690-3
- ^http://www.musicvf.com/Jennifer+Warnes.art
- ^Billboard Vol 87 #18 (3 May 1975) 'Signings' p. 30.
- ^Billboard Vol 87 #22 (31 May 1975) 'Studio Track' p. 31.
- ^ abThe Los Angeles Times 22 May 1977 'Second Flowering of Jennifer Warnes' by Dennis Hunt pp. 82, 90.
- ^ abcdhttps://www.nytimes.com/1977/04/24/archives/clives-comeback-fired-four-years-ago-by-cbs-clive-davis-is-setting.html
- ^Billboard Vol 88 #31 (31 July 1976) 'Studio Track' p. 34.
- ^Hyatt, Wesley (1999).The Billboard Book of #1 Adult Contemporary Hits (Billboard Publications)
- ^http://articles.latimes.com/1987-04-12/entertainment/ca-840_1_jennifer-warnes
- ^Billboard Vol 88 #34 (21 August 1976) 'New LP/ Tape Releases' p. 62.
- ^https://www.billboard.com/music/jennifer-warnes/chart-history
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jennifer_Warnes_(album)&oldid=895002851'
Artist: Jennifer Warnes
Title Of Album: Best of Jennifer Warnes
Year Of Release: 1982 (1994)
Label: Arista/ARCD 8348
Genre: Folk-Rock, Soft Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,scan)
Bitrate: lossless
Total Time: 34:22
Total Size: 213 mb
WebSite: amazon
Tracklist:
01. Right Time of the Night (2:56)
02. It Goes Like It Goes (2:53)
03. I Know a Heartache When I See One (3:30)
04. When the Feeling Comes Around (3:19)
05. I'm Restless (4:19)
06. Could It Be Love (3:34)
07. Run to Her (2:36)
08. I'm Dreaming (3:34)
09. Shot Through the Heart (4:17)
10. Come to Me (3:24)
Incomplete and premature, this ten-track compilation appeared at a time when Jennifer Warnes had released only two albums on Arista, resulting in five pop singles chart entries, including the Top Ten hit 'Right Time of the Night' and the Top 40 hit 'I Know a Heartache When I See One.' This album contained four of the five, plus 'Could It Be Love' and 'Come to Me,' which subsequently charted, a third newly recorded song, 'Run to Her,' two LP tracks composed by Warnes, and 'It Goes like It Goes,' the theme from the movie Norma Rae, which had won an Academy Award. Skimpy when released, the album has since become potentially deceptive, since it is easy for consumers to pick it up assuming it contains later Warnes hits like 'Up Where We Belong' and '(I've Had) The Time of My Life.' In fact, since Warnes has been on many labels and several of her hits are one-off movie themes, there is no reliable compilation of her work.