Create account Log in

Rock 'n' Roll Juvenile

[Edit]

Download links and information about Rock 'n' Roll Juvenile by Cliff Richard. This album was released in 1979 and it belongs to Rock, Pop genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 50:47 minutes.

Artist: Cliff Richard
Release date: 1979
Genre: Rock, Pop
Tracks: 14
Duration: 50:47
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Monday Thru' Friday (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:47
2. Doing Fine (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:06
3. Cities May Fall (2001 Digital Remaster) 4:17
4. You Know That I Love You (2001 Digital Remaster) 2:54
5. My Luck Won't Change (2001 Digital Remaster) 4:13
6. Rock 'n' Roll Juvenile (2001 Digital Remaster) 2:47
7. Sci-Fi (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:47
8. Fallin' In Luv (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:11
9. Carrie (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:43
10. Hot Shot (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:23
11. Language of Love (2001 Digital Remaster) 4:40
12. We Don't Talk Anymore (2001 Digital Remaster) 4:18
13. Walking In the Light (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:17
14. Moving In (2001 Digital Remaster) 3:24

Details

[Edit]

Cliff Richard's biggest hit album since the mid-'70s came at a time when observers were just beginning to suspect the bubble was bursting. His last few 45s and albums had struggled to repeat the successes that had re-established him on the scene, and a handful of weaker numbers were again crawling back into his repertoire. A change of scenery, to the same Pathe Marconi studios that the Rolling Stones had then-recently been using, brought a change of direction — gone were the straightforward love songs and ballads; in their stead, Richard began flirting with a distinctly new wave influenced sound, one that was confirmed by his interest in the newly emergent songwriter B.A. Robertson. Writing alongside Terry Britten, Robertson was responsible for Rock'n'Roll Juvenile's two biggest hits, "Hot Shot" and the still remarkable "Carrie" — one of the most distinctive numbers Richard had recorded in more than a decade. Other numbers — "Cities May Fall," "Sci Fi," "Walking in the Light" and the album's title track — maintained that same semi-quirky quality, while the addition of slide guitar and Mellotron to the band lineup gave the entire record such a red-hot contemporary feel that nobody could argue with the album's name. Richard was entering his fourth decade of recording, but he sounded like a kid again.