The Hottest Night of the Year |
---|
|
|
Released | June 3, 1982 |
---|
Studio | Producers Workshop (Los Angeles, California); Audio Media (Nashville, Tennessee); Eastern Sound (Toronto, Ontario, Canada). |
---|
Genre | Country |
---|
Length | 31:38 |
---|
Label | Capitol |
---|
Producer | Jim Ed Norman |
---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Hottest Night of the Year is the nineteenth studio album by Canadian country pop artist Anne Murray. It was released by Capitol Records in 1982. The album reached #29 on Billboard's Country albums chart and peaked at #90 on the Billboard Pop albums chart.[1] Its US sales were estimated at 200,000 copies.
The album's first single, a cover of the 1961 Bruce Channel hit "Hey! Baby" was a U.S. country top-ten single, reaching number 7; the following up single, "Somebody's Always Saying Goodbye", also peaked at number 7 on the country singles chart. Both singles topped the Canadian Country singles charts.
Track listing
Title | Writer(s) |
---|
1. | "The Hottest Night of the Year" | Kerry Chater, Lane Brody, Tom Campbell | 2:56 |
---|
2. | "Fallin' in Love (Fallin' Apart)" | Harry Shannon, Mitch Johnson | 3:39 |
---|
3. | "Somebody's Always Saying Goodbye" | Bob McDill | 3:24 |
---|
4. | "Easy Does It" | Chater, Campbell | 3:40 |
---|
5. | "Hey! Baby" | Bruce Channel, Margaret Cobb | 2:32 |
---|
6. | "Ain't No Way to Rise Above (Fallin' in Love)" | Chater, Patti Dahlstrom, Rory Bourke | 3:21 |
---|
7. | "Heart on the Line" | Don Stalker, Steve Berg, Steve Dorff | 2:36 |
---|
8. | "They Don't Call It Magic for Nothing" | Charlie Black, Molly Ann Leikin | 2:42 |
---|
9. | "That'll Keep Me Dreamin'" | Black, Leikin | 2:43 |
---|
10. | "Song for the Mira" | Allistar MacGillivray | 4:05 |
---|
Personnel
- Anne Murray – lead vocals, backing vocals
- Brian Whitcomb – electric piano (1), acoustic piano (2, 8, 9)
- Lance Ong – synthesizers (1, 2)
- Doug Riley – synthesizers (1), organ (3), keyboards (4-7, 10)
- Bobby Ogdin – acoustic piano (3)
- Dennis Burnside – electric piano (3)
- Mike "Pepe" Francis – electric guitar (1, 2, 8), guitars (4, 6, 7, 10)
- John Hug – electric guitar (1, 2, 8, 9), acoustic guitar (8)
- Fred Tackett – acoustic guitar (1, 2, 8, 9)
- Rafe Van Hoy – acoustic guitar (3)
- Paul Worley – acoustic guitar (3), electric guitar (3)
- Bob Mann – guitars (4-7, 10)
- Brian Russell – guitars (5)
- Sonny Garrish – steel guitar (3)
- Ben Mink – mandolin (10), fiddle (10)
- Leland Sklar – bass (1, 2, 8, 9)
- Joe Osborn – bass (3)
- Tom Szczesniak – bass (4-7, 10)
- Mike Botts – drums (1, 2, 8, 9)
- Eddie Bayers – drums (3)
- Barry Keane – drums (4-7, 10)
- Steve Forman – percussion (1, 2, 8)
- Dick Smith – percussion (1, 2, 4, 6-8)
- Earl Seymour – baritone saxophone (6)
- Vern Dorge – tenor saxophone (6)
- Butch Wantanabe – trombone (6)
- Guido Basso – trumpet (6)
- Charlie Gray – trumpet (6)
- Peter Cardinali – horn arrangements and conductor (6)
- Rick Wilkins – string arrangements and conductor (3, 4, 10)
- Alan Broadbent – string arrangements and conductor (8, 9)
- Glenn Grab – string contractor (3, 4, 8-10)
- Bill Richards – string contractor (3, 4, 8-10)
- Bruce Murray – backing vocals
- Deborah Schaal Greimann – backing vocals
Production
- Balmur Ltd. – executive producers
- Jim Ed Norman – producer
- Ken Friesen – recording, mixing
- Marshall Morgan – recording
- Eric Prestidge – recording
- Tom Henderson – recording assistant
- Ben Rodgers – recording assistant
- John Rosenthal – recording assistant
- Ken Perry – mastering at Capitol Mastering (Hollywood, California)
- Paul Cade – art direction, design, illustration
- Bob Karman – illustration
- Bill King – photography
- Ted Larson – lettering
- George Abbott – make-up artist
- Shelly Yakimov – hair stylist
Chart (1982)
|
Peak position
|
Canadian RPM Top Albums
|
70
|
U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums
|
29
|
U.S. Billboard 200
|
90
|
References
|
---|
Studio albums | |
---|
Christmas albums | |
---|
Compilation and live albums | |
---|
Singles | |
---|
Other songs | |
---|
Related articles | |
---|
|
Authority control databases | |
---|