Andrew Gold
Studio album by
Released1975
RecordedThe Sound Factory (Los Angeles, California).
GenrePop, pop rock
Length34:23
LabelAsylum
ProducerChuck Plotkin
Andrew Gold chronology
Andrew Gold
(1975)
What's Wrong with This Picture?
(1976)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic [1]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[2]

Andrew Gold is the first album by singer-songwriter Andrew Gold. It was released in 1975 on Asylum Records. Linda Ronstadt, of whose band Gold was a member at the time, appears on the album.

Reception

Rolling Stone's Stephen Holder said the album was "one of the year's most melodic" and "expresses, with warmth, humor and expertise, a special feeling for mid-Sixties rock." Holder notes that Gold "recaptures the essential spirit of 1964-65 Beatles music" and that his "ballads are as captivating as his rockers, if not more so."[3]

AllMusic's James Chrispell retrospectively said the album contains "[a]n abundance of riches." Noting "[t]here are great Beatlesque melodies here, as well as heartfelt love songs that are Gold's specialties."[1]

Uses in media

Leo Sayer covered Gold's song "Endless Flight" on his 1976 Endless Flight album.

Track listing

All songs written by Andrew Gold, except where noted.

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."That's Why I Love You"Gold, Gene Garfin3:11
2."Heartaches in Heartaches" 3:18
3."Love Hurts" 3:47
4."A Note from You" 2:48
5."Resting in Your Arms" 3:14
6."I'm a Gambler" 2:27
7."Endless Flight" 4:59
8."Hang My Picture Straight" 3:24
9."Ten Years Behind Me" 4:04
10."I'm Coming Home" 3:11
Bonus Tracks (Rhino/Edsel CD release)
No.TitleLength
1."Within a Word"2:03
2."Sometime When a Man's on His Own"2:47
3."Broken Pin Ball Machine"3:15
4."To Be Someone"4:17
5."Ten Years Behind Me" (demo)4:08
6."Hang My Picture Straight" (live at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, 1975)3:07

Personnel

Production

  • Chuck Plotkin – producer
  • Val Garay – engineer
  • Michael Boshears – recording
  • Jeff Hawks – assistant engineer
  • Doug Sax – mastering
  • The Mastering Lab (Hollywood, California) – mastering location
  • Glen Christensen – art direction
  • Tommy Steele – design
  • Bill Imhoff – illustration
  • Ken McGowan – photography
  • Norman Epstein – management

Charts

The single "That's Why I Love You" spent 5 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 beginning in January 1976, ultimately peaking at #68.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 Chrispell, James. Andrew Gold at AllMusic. Retrieved July 29, 2015.
  2. Larkin, Colin (1999). The Virgin Encyclopedia Of Popular Music, Concise 3rd Edition, p. 538. Virgin Books, London. ISBN 1-85227-832-3
  3. Holder, Stephen. "Andrew Gold Is Fab", Rolling Stone, December 4, 1975, p. 90.
  4. https://www.billboard.com/artist/andrew-gold/
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