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Get Closer (Linda Ronstadt album)

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Released
  
September 1982

Label
  
Asylum

Artist
  
Linda Ronstadt

Producer
  
Peter Asher

Length
  
36:31

Get Closer (1982)
  
What's New (1983)

Release date
  
September 1982

Get Closer (Linda Ronstadt album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb6

Recorded
  
August 1981 - August 1982

Genres
  
Rock music, Pop music, Country music, Hard rock

Awards
  
Grammy Award for Best Recording Package

Similar
  
Linda Ronstadt albums, Country music albums

Linda ronstadt get closer


Get Closer (1982) is a Grammy Award-winning album by singer/songwriter/producer Linda Ronstadt.

Contents

Linda ronstadt get closer


History

Get Closer found Ronstadt returning to the genres that had resulted in her commercial and critical success throughout the 1970s, and working again with British musician and producer Peter Asher.

The album contained two tracks originally recorded for but never included on previous albums. The first, a re-make of Jones' "Sometimes You Just Can't Win," was recorded in June 1977 with J. D. Souther on harmony vocals and intended for the album Simple Dreams. The other, a remake of Dolly Parton's 1971 composition "My Blue Tears," was performed with Parton and Emmylou Harris as part of a planned trio album that, because of scheduling and record company conflicts, was never released. The trio's version was originally recorded in January 1978 (Parton, Ronstadt and Harris would eventually record and release the first of two Trio albums in 1987). Also on Get Closer was a duet with James Taylor: a remake of Ike and Tina Turner's "I Think It's Gonna Work Out Fine".

Reception

Asylum Records released Get Closer in late September 1982. Reviewers wrote about a newfound confidence in Ronstadt's vocals. Ken Tucker of Rolling Stone magazine wrote in his November 11 review, "Linda Ronstadt's voice has never sounded better than it does on Get Closer...its spirit is unassailable." Noting her turn in Pirates, Tucker wrote that Ronstadt's vocal development on Broadway "hasn't made her self-conscious. Just the opposite, in fact: Linda Ronstadt is no longer a prisoner of technique." Tucker did decry much of the album's second side, saying that some of the oldies in the soul genre were performed too meticulously.

Stephen Holden of The New York Times wrote, "Miss Ronstadt's singing is so strong and unaffected." He paid special attention to the title track, calling it "the album's most adventurous performance" and noting Ronstadt's "shouting, growling exuberance reminiscent of Aretha Franklin's 'Respect.'"

Commercially, the album peaked at number 31 on the Billboard album chart in late 1982 and was immediately certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America for sales of over 500,000 copies. It had surpassed American sales of 900,000 copies at the time of its deletion.

This album's driving title track, "Get Closer" was written by Washington D.C.-based singer-songwriter Jon Carroll, an original member of the Starland Vocal Band. The song, notable for its unusual 7/4 time signature, was later chosen to promote Close-Up toothpaste ("Get Close Up").

Assisted by a popular MTV music video, "Get Closer" peaked at number 29 on the Billboard Hot 100 and hit the Top 20 in Cash Box magazine. It garnered considerable airplay on AOR (Album-Oriented Rock) stations while its follow-up single, "I Knew You When", was also aided by a popular music video and peaked at number 37 Pop, number 25 Adult Contemporary, and number 84 Country.

Ronstadt's seductive interpretation of Jimmy Webb's "Easy For You To Say" was a surprise Top Ten hit on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart in the spring of 1983. "Sometimes You Just Can't Win," the B-side to the "Get Closer" single, peaked at number 27 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart.

Ronstadt was nominated in early 1983 for a Grammy Award for Best Pop Vocal Performance Female and Best Rock Vocal Performance Female for the album and the song "Get Closer," losing to Melissa Manchester and Pat Benatar respectively. The album did, however, win the Grammy for Best Album Package, an art director's award. The trophy went to well known designers Ron Larson and Kosh.

Personnel

  • Linda Ronstadt - vocals
  • Emmylou Harris - lead vocals
  • Dolly Parton - lead and background vocals
  • James Taylor - guitar, background vocals
  • Peter Asher - guitar, background vocals
  • David Campbell - string arrangements
  • Dan Dugmore - electric guitar, pedal steel
  • Andrew Gold - acoustic and electric guitar, percussion, piano, keyboards, harmony vocals
  • Waddy Wachtel - acoustic and electric guitar, vocals
  • Danny Kortchmar - electric guitar
  • Bill Payne - organ, piano, conductor, keyboards, Fender Rhodes, string arrangements, Wurlitzer
  • Don Grolnick - organ, synthesizer
  • Kenny Edwards - acoustic bass, vocals
  • Bob Glaub - bass
  • Russ Kunkel - drums
  • Rick Marotta - drums
  • Rick Shlosser - drums
  • Jim Horn - baritone saxophone
  • Jerry Peterson - saxophone
  • Lindsey Buckingham - accordion
  • David Grisman - mandolin
  • Dennis Karmazyn - cello
  • J.D. Souther - lead and background vocals
  • Patti Austin - background vocals
  • Rosemary Butler - background vocals
  • Edie Lehmann - background vocals
  • Debbie Pearl - background vocals
  • Production

  • Peter Asher - Producer
  • George Massenburg - Engineer
  • Val Garay - Engineer
  • Niko Bolas, Barbara Rooney and Bruce Wildstein - Assistant Engineers
  • Doug Sax - Mastering Engineer
  • Edd Kolakowski - Piano and Guitar Technician
  • Aaron Rapoport - Photography
  • John Kosh with Ron Larson - Art Direction and Design
  • Gloria Boyce - Album Coordination
  • Songs

    1Get Closer2:31
    2The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress3:03
    3I Knew You When2:55

    References

    Get Closer (Linda Ronstadt album) Wikipedia