Time Life: Sounds of the Eighties was a 10-volume series issued by Time-Life.
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Starship. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Starship. Mostrar todas las entradas
jueves, 5 de abril de 2018
Various Artists "Time Life: Sounds Of The Eighties - 1987"
Etiquetas:
Bananarama,
Belinda Carlisle,
Boston,
Club Noveau,
Crowded House,
Cutting Crew,
Debbie Gibson,
Fleetwood Mac,
Jody Watley,
Kim Wilde,
Lou Gramm,
Robbie Nevil,
Starship,
Tiffany,
V.A.,
Wang Chung
Various Artists "Time Life: Sounds Of The Eighties - 1986"
Etiquetas:
Bananarama,
Belinda Carlisle,
Cameo,
Dire Straits,
Falco,
Genesis,
Howard Jones,
Mr. Mister,
Peter Cetera,
Robert Palmer,
Starship,
Stevie Nicks,
Survivor,
The Dream Academy,
The Pretenders,
V.A.,
Wang Chung
Various Artists "Time Life: Sounds Of The Eighties - 1985"
Etiquetas:
'Til Tuesday,
A-ha,
Commodores,
Frankie Goes To Hollywood,
Glenn Frey,
John Parr,
Katrina And The Waves,
Mr. Mister,
Paul Young,
Starship,
Tears For Fears,
The Honeydrippers,
The Power Station,
V.A.
viernes, 29 de diciembre de 2017
Starship "We Built This City: The Very Best Of Starship"
"We Built This City: The Very Best Of Starship" is a compilation by American rock band Starship released in 1997.
martes, 26 de diciembre de 2017
Starship "Greatest Hits (Ten Years And Change 1979–1991)"
Greatest Hits (Ten Years and Change 1979–1991) is a compilation album released in 1991 when Starship ended its recording contract with RCA Records. The album contains two new tracks, "Don't Lose Any Sleep" and "Good Heart". "Good Heart" was released as a single and hit number 81 on the Billboard charts. A third track, "Keys to the City" was recorded at this time and finally saw release on the 2012 compilation Playlist: The Very Best of Starship. "We built this city" was remixed for this compilation by Bill Bottrel who took out the spoken-word interlude by Les Garland.
Track listing
- "Jane" (from Freedom at Point Zero) David Freiberg, Jim McPherson Freiberg, McPherson, Paul Kantner, Craig Chaquico Ron Nevison 4:11
- "Find Your Way Back" (from Modern Times) Chaquico Chaquico, Tom Borsdorf Ron Nevison 4:16
- "Stranger" (from Modern Times) Jeannette Sears Pete Sears Ron Nevison 4:44
- "No Way Out" (from Nuclear Furniture) Ina Wolf Peter Wolf Ron Nevison 4:24
- "Layin' It on the Line" (from Nuclear Furniture) Mickey Thomas, Chaquico Chaquico, Thomas Ron Nevison 4:09
- "Don't Lose Any Sleep" Diane Warren Warren Ron Nevison 4:22
- "We Built This City" (Edited Remix, LP Version on Knee Deep in the Hoopla) Bernie Taupin, Martin Page, Dennis Lambert, P. Wolf Martin Page Peter Wolf 4:38
- "Sara" (from Knee Deep in the Hoopla) I. Wolf P. Wolf Peter Wolf 4:48
- "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" (from No Protection) Albert Hammond, Warren Hammond, Warren Narada Michael Walden 4:30
- "It's Not Over ('Til It's Over)" (from No Protection) Robbie Nevil John Van Tongeren, Phil Galdston Keith Olsen 4:17
- "It's Not Enough" (from Love Among the Cannibals) Martin Page, Tommy Funderburk Martin Page Mike Shipley, Larry Klein 4:49
- "Good Heart" Martin Page Martin Page Peter Wolf 4:22
Ron Nevison – producer and engineer on "Don't Lose Any Sleep"
Peter Wolf – producer on "Good Heart"
Paul Erickson – engineer on "Good Heart"
Brian Malouf – mixing engineer on "Good Heart"
"Don't Lose Any Sleep" recorded 1990 at Record Plant, Hollywood, CA and Studio D Recording, Sausalito, CA
"Good Heart" recorded 1991 at Embassy Studios, Simi Valley, CA
Ria Lewerke – art direction
Jacqueline Murphy – design
Stanley Mouse – illustration
Bill Thompson – management
Linda Lalli – assistant to manager
Starship "Love Among The Cannibals"
Love Among the Cannibals is the third album released in 1989 by rock band Starship. It was the first album after Grace Slick's departure from the band, and their last full-length studio release until Loveless Fascination in 2013. The song "Wild Again" had previously been produced for the soundtrack to Cocktail (1988), and was included as a bonus track for the album's CD release. The album had one top 20 single on the Billboard charts, "It's Not Enough", which peaked at No. 12 in October 1989 and was their final Top-40 hit, but the album itself only climbed to No. 64. The track "I'll Be There" went on to being featured in the end credits of Gross Anatomy (1989).
Starship "No Protection"
No Protection (1987) is the second album by Starship. The album featured the hit single "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now", and the Top 10 hit "It's Not Over ('Til It's Over)", the former of which was included on the soundtrack of the fantasy comedy movie Mannequin and the latter of which was a tune originally performed the previous year by one-time Manfred Mann's Earth Band frontman Chris Thompson for Playing for Keeps soundtrack. This was the last album to be produced for Grunt Records, and the final Starship album to feature Grace Slick on vocals; she left Starship in 1988 and rejoined Jefferson Airplane for their reunion tour and self-titled reunion album, Jefferson Airplane in 1989. The Diane Warren-penned ballad "Set the Night to Music" would become a hit four years later in 1991, as a duet between R&B legend Roberta Flack and reggae singer Maxi Priest, as released from Flack's album Set the Night to Music.
miércoles, 22 de noviembre de 2017
Starship "Knee Deep In The Hoopla"
Knee Deep in the Hoopla is the 1985 debut album by Starship, the successor band to Jefferson Starship. It was certified platinum by the RIAA, and is best remembered for spawning the No. 1 hits "We Built This City" and "Sara"; The album's title comes from a lyric of the former.
The track "Desperate Heart," written by Michael Bolton and Randy Goodrum, also appears on Bolton's album Everybody's Crazy, released the same year. Two Grace Slick-sung tracks were recorded for but left off the album: Slick's own "Do You Remember Me?" (released on The Best of Grace Slick) and the Peter Wolf-Jeremy Smith composition "Casualty" (included as a bonus track on the 1999 remaster). Jeannette and Pete Sears wrote a song for the album called "One More Innocent," though it was rejected for its political lyrics.
Knee Deep in the Hoopla was released on September 10, 1985, through record label Grunt.
Four singles were released from the album: the No. 1 hits "We Built This City" and "Sara", "Tomorrow Doesn't Matter Tonight" and "Before I Go".
The album was certified platinum by the RIAA.
Track listing
Side one
- "We Built This City" Bernie Taupin, Martin Page, Dennis Lambert, Peter Wolf 4:53
- "Sara" Ina Wolf, P. Wolf 4:48
- "Tomorrow Doesn't Matter Tonight" Steven Cristol, Robin Randall 3:41
- "Rock Myself to Sleep" Kimberley Rew, Vince De la Cruz 3:24
- "Desperate Heart" Randy Goodrum, Michael Bolton 4:04
Side two
- "Private Room" Craig Chaquico, Mickey Thomas 4:51
- "Before I Go" David Roberts 5:30
- "Hearts of the World (Will Understand)" Stephen Broughton Lunt, Arthur Stead 4:21
- "Love Rusts" Taupin, Page 4:57
Remastered CD bonus track
- "Casualty" P. Wolf, Jeremy Smith 4:34
Jeremy Smith – producer, engineer
Dennis Lambert – executive producer
Skip Johnson – production coordinator
Bill Thompson – manager
Bill Bottrell – mixing engineer on "We Built This City".
Tom Size – additional engineering
Paul Ericksen, Dana Chappelle, David Luke, Maureen Droney – assistant engineers.
Stephen Marcussen – mastering engineer
Raess Design (Ted Raess) – art, design
Bill Robbins – photography
Recorded at The Plant Studios (Sausalito, CA); The Music Grinder (Los Angeles, CA).
Mixed at Fantasy Studios (Berkeley, CA).
"We Built This City" re-mixed at The Soundcastle, L. A.
Mastered at Precision Lacquer (Los Angeles).
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