Showing posts with label Here I Am. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Here I Am. Show all posts

Monday, January 23, 1989

Lyle Lovett Lyle Lovett and His Large Band released

Lyle Lovett and His Large Band

Lyle Lovett


Released: January 23, 1989


Peak: 62 US, 10 CW, 88 CN


Sales (in millions): 0.5 US


Genre: alt-country/Americana


Tracks:

Song Title (Writers) [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. The Blues Walk (Brown) [2:25]
  2. Here I Am [4:01]
  3. Cryin’ Shame [2:28]
  4. Good Intentions [3:13]
  5. I Know You Know [3:57]
  6. What Do You Do/The Glory of Love (Hill/ Lovett) [3:06]
  7. I Married Her Just Because She Looks Like You [3:14] (12/10/88, 45 CW)
  8. Stand by Your Man (Sherrill/ Wynette) [2:44] (3/4/89, 82 CW)
  9. Which Way Does That Old Pony Run? [4:08]
  10. Nobody Knows Me [3:06] (6/17/89, 84 CW)
  11. If You Were to Wake Up [4:07]
  12. Once Is Enough [4:26]

Songs written by Lyle Lovett unless noted otherwise.


Total Running Time: 40:55

Rating:

3.960 out of 5.00 (average of 13 ratings)


Awards: (Click on award to learn more).

About the Album:

“While from the outset Lyle Lovett sounded like a hard artist to pigeonhole, his sponsors at Curb Records and MCA Records seemed determined to sell him as a country artist, though the blues and retro-jazz leanings of Lovett’s second album, Pontiac, suggested that strategy would only be practical for so long. With his third album, 1989’s Lyle Lovett and His Large Band, Lovett seemingly sidelined any career aspirations as a mainstream country act he or his handlers may have held.” MD

“The album kicks off with a lively cover of Clifford Brown’s The Blues Walk, and the next five tunes all bear the smoky, late-night vibe of a low-key jazz joint, with top marks going to the hilariously off-kilter Here I Am, the witty scenario of potential infidelity What Do You Do/The Glory of Love, and the marvelously sly Good Intentions.” MD

“The second half of the album is steeped in twang, but it was hardly more comforting for country radio programmers; I Married Her Just Because She Looks Like You is a ‘sweet on the outside and sick on the inside’ tale of romantic obsession, Nobody Knows Me bears a punchline that makes ‘God Will’ sound generous, and Lovett’s straight-faced cover of Stand By Your Man stubbornly refuses to either announce itself as a joke or suggest another interpretation.” MD

“Wherever you choose to file it, Lyle Lovett and His Large Band made it clear that Lovett was only getting better with each album; the songs are uniformly well-crafted, Lovett’s vocals are full of subtle nuance, and his band is in brilliant form throughout (with special kudos to Lovett’s frequent vocal foil, Francine Reed). If you’re going to burn your bridges, you could hardly find a better way to do it than this.” MD

Resources and Related Links:


Other Related DMDB Pages:


First posted 3/24/2008; last updated 5/18/2022.

Saturday, June 13, 1981

Air Supply’s The One That You Love hit the U.S. charts

First posted 1/18/2009; updated 9/20/2020.

The One That You Love

Air Supply


Charted: June 13, 1981


Peak: 10 US, -- UK, 21 CN, 10 AU


Sales (in millions): 1.0 US, -- UK, 1.0 world (includes US and UK)


Genre: adult contemporary


Tracks:

Song Title (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. Don’t Turn Me Away
  2. Here I Am (Just When I Thought I Was Over You) (9/19/81, 5 US, 1 AC, 43 AU, airplay: 1 million)
  3. Keeping the Love Alive
  4. The One That You Love (5/16/81, 1 US, 2 AC, 10 AU, sales: 1 million, airplay: 1 million)
  5. This Heart Belongs to Me
  6. Sweet Dreams (12/12/81, 5 US, 4 AC, airplay: 1 million)
  7. I Want to Give It All
  8. I’ll Never Get Enough of You
  9. Tonite
  10. I’ve Got Your Love


Total Running Time: 39:59


The Players:

  • Russell Hitchcock (vocals)
  • Graham Russell (vocals, rhythm guitar)
  • Rex Goh, David Moyse (guitars)
  • Dave Green (bass)
  • Frank Esler-Smith (keyboards)
  • Ralph Cooper (drums)

Rating:

3.573 out of 5.00 (average of 4 ratings)


Awards:

About the Album:

The One That You Love was Air Supply’s second international release and perhaps their finest all-around studio outing.” AMG Like its predecessor, Lost in Love, the album was produced by future-Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Clive Davis. Both albums also spawned three top-five Billboard Hot 100 hits. the lead single, “the heart-wrenching title track,” AMG became Air Supply’s first and only chart-topper.

“The sheer drama of Here I Am and the swooping orchestration of Sweet Dreams complete this smash-hit trilogy.” AMG The former was “closely related to the style of Barry Manilow, one of the band’s influences” WK while the latter came closer than anything the group had done to a foray into rock. The song also lent itself to a more bombastic, orchestral treatment, as demonstrated in the video below.

“As suggested by their name, a sense of air and space pervades other pop-tastic ballads such as This Heart Belongs to Me and Keeping the Love Alive.” AMG I’ll Never Get Enough of You was the main theme of a Japanese TV novel, leading it to become the group’s first entry on any Asian chart. WK


Notes: --

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