Ladies Love Outlaws (Tom Rush album)

Ladies Love Outlaws is the 1974 country rock album from folk rock musician Tom Rush. The album spent nine weeks on the Billboard 200 charts, peaking at number 124 on November 16, 1974.[2]

Ladies Love Outlaws
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 1974
Recorded1974
StudioMediasound, New York, NY
GenreCountry rock/Folk rock
Length35:30
LabelColumbia
ProducerMark Spector
Tom Rush chronology
Merrimack County
(1972)
Ladies Love Outlaws
(1974)
New Year
(1982)
Singles from Ladies Love Outlaws
  1. "Ladies Love Outlaws"
    Released: August, 1974
  2. "No Regrets"
    Released: January, 1975
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [1]

Track listing

  1. "Ladies Love Outlaws" (Lee Clayton) – 2:28
  2. "Hobo's Mandolin" (Michael Peter Smith) – 3:12
  3. "Indian Woman from Wichita" (Wayne Berry) – 4:19
  4. "Maggie" (Tom Rush) – 3:32
  5. "Desperados Waiting for a Train" (Guy Clark) – 3:30
  6. "Claim on Me" (Clayton) – 4:08
  7. "Jenny Lynn" (Richard Dean) – 2:59
  8. "Black Magic Gun" (Wayne Berry) – 3:26
  9. "No Regrets" (Rush) – 5:41
  10. "One Day I Walk" (Bruce Cockburn) – 2:15

Personnel

Musicians

The Memphis Horns

(tracks 1, 5)

Technical

  • Mark Spector – producer
  • Alan Varner – engineer
  • Lou Schlossberg – assistant engineer
  • Terry Rosiello – assistant engineer
  • Allan Blazek, Jeffrey Lesser, Roger Nichols, Stan Tonkel, Ted Sturges – additional engineering (overdubs)
  • Stewart Romain – mastering
  • John Berg – design
  • Beverly Mundy – photography
  • James Grashowcover art
gollark: You'll probably need some JavaScript on the client for this. You could either constantly refresh the page or have code fetch the values and update the HTML periodically.
gollark: Do you want to make it constantly run the check thing on the *server* or just have the *client* constantly refresh or something?
gollark: Wow, that's somehow half the speed of my home connection run over some ancient phone line.
gollark: This is mostly two-way, i.e. two threads per core, however some enterprisey ones go to 4 or 8; this has diminishing returns because more and more of the execution resources are already used.
gollark: So when the core is waiting on memory access required for one thread, say, it can run the other one in the meantime.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.