Worlds Away (Pablo Cruise album)

Worlds Away is the fourth and most successful album by the California soft rock group Pablo Cruise. The album charted higher than any other of the band's albums, reaching #6 in the United States. Three singles were released from the album: "Love Will Find a Way", "Don't Want to Live Without It" and "I Go to Rio", reaching #6, #21, and #46 respectively. The title track, "Worlds Away" was not released as a single, but remains a favorite among many fans of the band today.[3]

Worlds Away
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 1978
RecordedThe Record Plant, Sausalito, Redwing Sound, Los Angeles; mixed at Studio 55 and The Sound Factory, Los Angeles
GenrePop rock
Length39:55
LabelA&M
ProducerBill Schnee
Pablo Cruise chronology
A Place in the Sun
(1977)
Worlds Away
(1978)
Part of the Game
(1979)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Christgau's Record GuideC[2]

Before the album was recorded, original bassist Bud Cockrell left the band and was replaced by Bruce Day.

Track listing

Side One

  1. "Worlds Away" (Lerios, Day, Bob Brown) - 3:45
  2. "Love Will Find a Way" (Jenkins, Lerios) - 4:11
  3. "Family Man" (Jenkins, Lerios) - 4:58
  4. "Runnin'" (Jenkins, Lerios) - 6:30

Side Two

  1. "Don't Want to Live Without It" (Jenkins, Lerios) - 4:37
  2. "You're Out to Lose" (Jenkins, Lerios, Michael McDonald) - 3:28
  3. "Always Be Together" (Jenkins, Lerios) - 5:01
  4. "Sailing to Paradise" (Jenkins, Lerios, David Batteau) - 3:26
  5. "I Go to Rio" (Peter Allen, Adrienne Anderson) - 3:59

Personnel

Sidemen

Production

gollark: LocalStorage and IndexedDB would be replaced with WebSQL or something, which is just an interface to SQLite.
gollark: It'll send your cookies with it and stuff, so if you could see the response it would be a horrible security problem.
gollark: Yes. The situation now is that browsers will happily send requests from one origin to another, but only if it's a GET or POST request, not allow custom headers with it, and, critically, do bizarre insane stuff to avoid letting code see the *response*.
gollark: Oh, and unify ServiceWorker and WebWorker and SharedWorker and whatever into some sort of nicer "background task" API.
gollark: API coherency: drop stuff like XMLHttpRequest which is obsoleted by cleaner things like `fetch`, actually have a module system and don't just randomly scatter objects and functions in the global scope, don't have a weird mix of callbacks, events and promises everywhere.

References

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