Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

White Limozeen

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Released
  
May 11, 1989

Length
  
35:16

Release date
  
11 May 1989

Label
  
Columbia Records

Recorded
  
1989

Artist
  
Dolly Parton

Producer
  
Ricky Skaggs

Genre
  
Country music

White Limozeen httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenffbWhi

White Limozeen (1989)
  
Home for Christmas (1990)

Similar
  
Dolly Parton albums, Country music albums

Dolly parton time for me to fly


White Limozeen is Dolly Parton's 29th solo studio album, released in May 1989, that returned the performer to the country music fold, after the critical and commercial failure of 1987's Rainbow. The album was produced by Ricky Skaggs, and featured a duet with Mac Davis along with a cover version of Don Francisco's Christian classic, "He's Alive" and a cover of the REO Speedwagon hit "Time for Me to Fly." For Parton's efforts, she was rewarded with two country #1 singles: "Why'd You Come in Here Lookin' Like That" and "Yellow Roses". The album spent 100 weeks and peaked at #3 on the U.S. country albums chart and won Parton back much of the critical praise she had lost with Rainbow. It ended up being certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America.

Contents

In 2009, Sony BMG re-released White Limozeen in a triple-feature CD set with Eagle When She Flies and Slow Dancing with the Moon.

White limozeen dolly parton


Singles

In anticipation of the album, in April 1989 the lead single, "Why'd You Come in Here Lookin' Like That" was released. It was a #1 Country single, and was given a music video.

After the album showed to be doing well, in July 1989 the second single, "Yellow Roses" was released, also becoming a #1 Country single.

October 1989 saw the third single, "He's Alive" being released. An accompanying video was released, consisting of footage of Parton's performance of the song on the CMA Awards show, earlier that month. It was a cover of Don Francisco's song of the same name. The single peaked at # 39.

In February 1990 she released the fourth single, "Time For Me to Fly", a cover of REO Speedwagon's song of the same name. Like its immediate predecessor, the single also peaked at #39.

In May 1990 the fifth single, the title track, was released, also without promotion, as by this point she was recording a holiday album, Home for Christmas. It reached #29 on the country singles charts.

A sixth single, "Take Me Back to the Country", was released that same year, but is rarely known, and it was the final bit of promotion for this album. The single did not chart.

Production

  • Produced By Ricky Skaggs
  • Engineered By Tom Harding, Scott Hendricks, Pat Hutchinson, Doug Johnson, George Massenburg, Mike Poole & Ed Seay
  • Assistant Engineers: Jeff Giedt, Rodney Good, Brad Jones
  • Mixing: Doug Johnson
  • Mastering: Denny Purcell
  • Engineer Outboard Gear Service: Studio Equipment Rental (co owner: Pamela M Jones)
  • Personnel

  • Drums: Eddie Bayers
  • Percussion: Farrell Morris, Ricky Skaggs
  • Bass: Mike Brignardello, Craig Nelson
  • Keyboards, Piano, DX-7: Barry Beckett, David Huntsinger, John Barlow Jarvis
  • Guitars: Mark Casstevens, Steve Gibson, Vince Gill, Albert Lee, Mac McAnally, Ricky Skaggs, Reggie Young
  • Fiddle: Stuart Duncan, Ricky Skaggs
  • Pedabro: Paul Franklin
  • Steel: Terry Crisp, Lloyd Green, John Hughey, Paul Franklin
  • Banjo: Béla Fleck
  • Mandolin: Ricky Skaggs
  • Cello: Bob Mason
  • Accordion: Jo-El Sonnier
  • Strings: Nashville String Machine
  • String Arrangements By D. Bergen White
  • Songs

    1Time for Me to Fly2:53
    2Yellow Roses3:56
    3Whyd'd You Come in Here Lookin' Like That2:34

    References

    White Limozeen Wikipedia