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I'm Nearly Famous

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Download links and information about I'm Nearly Famous by Cliff Richard. This album was released in 1976 and it belongs to Rock, Pop genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 59:05 minutes.

Artist: Cliff Richard
Release date: 1976
Genre: Rock, Pop
Tracks: 18
Duration: 59:05
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. I Can't Ask For Anymore Than You (2001 Digital Remaster) 2:50
2. It's No Use Pretending (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:22
3. I'm Nearly Famous (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:54
4. Lovers (2001 Digital Remaster) 2:58
5. Junior Cowboy (2001 Digital Remaster) 2:44
6. Miss You Nights (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:57
7. I Wish You'd Change Your Mind (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:04
8. Devil Woman (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:35
9. Such Is the Mystery (2001 Digital Remaster) 5:11
10. You've Got To Give Me All Your Lovin' (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:06
11. If You Walked Away (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:02
12. Alright, It's Alright (2001 Digital Remaster) 2:33
13. Love Enough (2001 Digital Remaster) 2:50
14. Love On (Shine On) (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:04
15. Honky Tonk Angel (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:03
16. Wouldn't You Know It? (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:03
17. It's Only Me You've Left Behind (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:07
18. You're the One (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:42

Details

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I'm Nearly Famous is the album which marked Cliff Richard's return from the commercial and, in many ways, creative void which had consumed him since the end of the 1960s. Recorded with former Shadow Brian Bennett in the production chair and boasting the most consistently excellent clutch of songs and performances Richard had mustered in over a decade, the album was previewed by the lovely "Miss You Night," opened with the neo-disco "I Can't Ask for Anything More," and peaked with "Devil Woman," a rocker which became his first ever U.S. Top Ten hit. But they were simply the best-known standouts. "It's No Use Pretending" was an anthemic ballad with more than a hint of Elton John around its execution — quite coincidentally, it was John's Rocket label which oversaw the album's American release. From the same writing team of Michael Allison and Peter Sill, the riff sodden rocking title track, too, has ghosts of John around it — think "Crocodile Rock" meets "Bennie & the Jets." The tide flows both ways, however. Of course the two artists sound alike, but there was a time, when John was first breaking through, when a lot of people thought he sounded like Richard. Chicken? Meet the egg. There are a couple of less than stellar moments — "Lovers" is basic big ballad by numbers, "Junior Cowboy" is the kind of ersatz country rocker which Richard had done much better in the past. What's important, however, is that once these would have been the highlights of a new Richard album; either that, or indistinguishable from all the other ballads and country rockers on board. This time around, they were simply a lull before the next masterpiece rolled out. I'm Nearly Famous rates, alongside David Cassidy's The Higher They Climb, among the most surprising albums of the mid-1970s, a record which was made in the face of both critical hostility and public indifference, yet managed to completely redefine its creator in the eyes of both. Cassidy, of course, never followed up his renaissance. Richard, on the other hand, hasn't looked back since.