Lights Out (Peter Wolf album)

Lights Out is the debut solo album by Peter Wolf, released in 1984.

Lights Out
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 1984
GenreRock, blues rock, dance-rock
Length41:10
LabelEMI America
ProducerPeter Wolf, Michael Jonzun
Peter Wolf chronology
Lights Out
(1984)
Come As You Are
(1987)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Track listing

  1. "Lights Out" (Don Covay, Wolf) - 4:27
  2. "I Need You Tonight" (Peter Bliss, Wolf) - 3:39
  3. "Oo-Ee-Diddley-Bop!" (Michael Jonzun, Wolf, Gordon Worthy) - 4:13
  4. "Gloomy Sunday" (László Jávor, Sam M. Lewis, Rezső Seress) - 3:37
  5. "Baby Please Don't Let Me Go" (Jonzun, Maurice Starr, Wolf) - 4:02
  6. "Crazy" (Jonzun, Wolf) - 3:49
  7. "Poor Girl's Heart" (Jonzun, Wolf) - 3:04
  8. "Here Comes That Hurt" (Jonzun, Wolf) - 3:14
  9. "Pretty Lady" (Jonzun, Wolf) - 3:44
  10. "Mars Needs Women" (Jonzun, Wolf) - 2:41
  11. "Billy Bigtime" (Jonzun, Timothy S. Mayer, Wolf) - 4:40

Personnel

Production

  • Producers: Peter Wolf, Michael Jonzun
  • Engineer: Ed Stasium
  • Mixing assistant: Billy Miranda
  • Studio assistants: Sidney Burton, Calvin Johnson, Tom Moore
  • Assistant: Gordon Worthy
  • Arrangers: Peter Wolf, Michael Jonzun
  • Art direction: Carin Goldberg, Henry Marquez
  • Design: Carin Goldberg, Henry Marquez
  • Logo design: Michael Diehl
  • Photography: Carol Friedman, Ron Pownall
  • Cover photo: Chris Callis

Charts

Chart (1984) Peak
position
The Billboard 200 24
Singles
Year Single Chart Position
1984 "Crazy" Billboard Top Rock Tracks 26
1984 "I Need You Tonight" Billboard Top Rock Tracks 22
1984 The Billboard Hot 100 36
1984 "Lights Out" Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play 11
1984 The Billboard Hot 100 12
1985 "Oo-Ee-Diddley-Bop!" The Billboard Hot 100 61

Notes

gollark: Next time, you should do backups of things.
gollark: I'm sure it's theoretically possible to do physics and nonphysics things simultaneously.
gollark: That would be mean.
gollark: It probably won't try and take over all global transport networks to optimise some bizarre efficiency metric regardless of actual human desires, or anything like that.
gollark: Of course.
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