词条 | Barney Bentall and the Legendary Hearts (album) |
释义 |
| name = Barney Bentall and the Legendary Hearts | type = studio | artist = Barney Bentall and the Legendary Hearts | cover = Barney Bentall and the Legendary Hearts, album cover.jpg | alt = | released = {{Start date|1988}} | recorded = December 1987 – March 1988 | venue = | studio = Mushroom Studios | genre = | length = {{Duration|m=50|s=17}} | label = Epic Records | producer = David Tickle | prev_title = | prev_year = | next_title = Lonely Avenue | next_year = 1990 }} Barney Bentall and the Legendary Hearts is the eponymous debut album by the Canadian band Barney Bentall and the Legendary Hearts. It became a platinum record in Canada.{{sfn|Kent|1999}} The album was recorded at Mushroom Studios in Vancouver, British Columbia between December 1987 and March 1988, and was published by Epic Records and CBS Records in 1988.{{sfn|Quill|June 1988|p=F1}} The song "Something to Live For" became a number one hit in Canada, the band's first top-ten single.{{sfn|Kent|1999}}{{sfn|Penticton Western News|2015}} Two other songs, "House of Love (is Haunted)" and "Come Back to Me", also charted in Canada, and the band became a "pop radio fixture" in Canada.{{sfn|Bloomquist|1989}} Gary Fraser, a friend of Barney Bentall, wrote all the album's lyrics.{{sfn|Quill|August 1988|p=E11}} He began writing lyrics for Bentall in 1978, when he sent Bentall poems.{{sfn|Dafoe|1990|p=C1}} Bentall and Fraser prepared a demo tape, produced by Bob Rock.{{sfn|Harrison|2013}} The band hired film students to record a music video for "Something to Live For", which drew the attention of managers at MuchMusic, who broadcast the video frequently.{{sfn|Kent|1999}} The video was described by media critic Peter Goddard of the Toronto Star as "simplicity itself".{{sfn|Goddard|1987|p=E1}} The success of the album resulted in the band receiving the 1989 Juno Award for Most Promising Group of the Year.{{sfn|Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences}}{{sfn|Harrison|2013}} The band was considered a favourite to win the award against other nominees 54-40, The Jitters, The Northern Pikes, and The Pursuit of Happiness.{{sfn|MacInnis|1989|p=F1}} They were also nominated for Canadian Entertainer of the Year, which was ultimately awarded to Glass Tiger.{{sfn|Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences}}{{sfn|Toronto Star|1988|p=E27}} The band signed a recording contract with CBS Records and signed a management contract with Bernie Finklestein.{{sfn|Harrison|2013}} Finklestein would include a quotation of lyrics from "Something to Live for" in his 2012 autobiography True North.{{sfn|Finklestein|2012|p=26}} Track listing{{Album ratings| title = | subtitle = | rev1 = AllMusic | rev1Score = {{rating|2.5|5}}{{sfn|AllMusic}} | rev2 = | rev2score = | rev3 = | rev3score = | noprose = }}{{Track listing | collapsed = | headline = | extra_column = | total_length = | all_lyrics = Gary Fraser | all_music = Barney Bentall | writing_credits = | lyrics_credits = | music_credits = | title1 = Something to Live for | note1 = | extra1 = | length1 = 4:38 | title2 = House of Love (Is Haunted) | note2 = | extra2 = | length2 = 3:31 | title3 = Jelly Roll | note3 = composed by Barney Bentall, Barry Muir and Colin Nairne | extra3 = | length3 = 4:08 | title4 = She's My Inspiration | note4 = | extra4 = | length4 = 4:21 | title5 = Black Clouds | note5 = | extra5 = | length5 = 7:04 | title6 = Come Back to Me | note6 = | extra6 = | length6 = 3:44 | title7 = I Want Her | note7 = | extra7 = | length7 = 5:04 | title8 = Pale Blue Eyes | note8 = | extra8 = | length8 = 4:31 | title9 = Carry on | note9 = | extra9 = | length9 = 4:25 | title10 = Somewhere There's an Angel | note10 = | extra10 = | length10 = 4:02 | title11 = Josephine | note11 = composed by Barney Bentall, Barry Muir and Colin Nairne | extra11 = | length11 = 4:49 }} NotesReferences{{refbegin|30em}}
External links
2 : 1988 debut albums|Barney Bentall and the Legendary Hearts albums |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。