Rubicon (Rubicon album)
Rubicon is the eponymous debut album from the late-1970s funk rock band Rubicon (formed by Jerry Martini from Sly & the Family Stone and featuring future Night Ranger members Jack Blades on bass and Brad Gillis on guitars). Released on 20th Century Fox in 1978, it featured the band's one and only hit single (leading them to be categorized as a one hit wonder), the Max Haskett-penned "I'm Gonna Take Care Of Everything" (highest Billboard peak: 28 in 1978).
Rubicon | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1978 | |||
Recorded | 1977-1978 | |||
Genre | Funk rock | |||
Label | 20th Century Fox | |||
Producer | Richard Polodor | |||
Rubicon chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | Not rated link |
In 2009, it was reissued as part of a combo pack with their next (and final) album, "American Dreams" by Renaissance Records.
Track listing
- All Songs Arranged By Rubicon & Published By Fox Fanfare Music, Inc./Nocibur Music-BMI.
- And The Moon's Out Tonight (Gerald Martini) 3:28
- Far Away (Max Haskett) 4:59
- Closely (Dennis Marcellino) 5:30
- Vanilla Gorilla (Martini, Haskett) 5:06
- I'm Gonna Take Care Of Everything (Haskett) 3:38
- I Want To Love You (Jack Blades) 3:11
- Cheatin' (Gregory Eckler, James Pugh) 3:46
- It's All For The Show (Eckler) 3:50
- That's The Way Things Are (Martini, Lynn Medeiros) 5:41
Personnel
- Max Haskett: Lead Vocal, Trumpet
- Dennis Marcellino: Sax, lead vocal, acoustic guitar
- Jerry Martini: Sax
- Brad Gillis: Lead & Rhythm Guitar
- Jim Pugh: Keyboards
- Jack Blades: Bass
- Gregory Eckler: Drums, Percussion, Lead Vocal
Production
- Produced By Richard Polodor
- Recorded, Engineered & Mixed By Bill Cooper
gollark: I would not really be against a binary HTML encoding since it could be useful in other places, *especially* since it could be parsed way faster if you impose constraints browsers can't because backward compat.
gollark: Presumably.
gollark: Although perhaps less if you compress it, hmmmm.
gollark: I bet you could transcode HTML to protobuffers/msgpack/etc and save a lot of space.
gollark: Or a binary HTML encoding or something (actually, that might be good)?
External links
- "Rubicon/American Dreams" at allmusic Retrieved September 24, 2010
- "Rubicon" at discogs Retrieved September 24, 2010
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.