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Kenny

 
 

  • Artist: Kenny Rogers
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1979
  • Genre: Country

Review

Kenny arrived two years after his last eponymous album Kenny Rogers and those were eventful years for Rogers. During that time, he became a major star, largely due to his version of "The Gambler," a song by Don Schlitz that Kenny turned into his own on his 1978 album of the same name (although it has to be said that Rogers' version bears a startling similarity to Bobby Bare's version released that very year). Kenny was the follow-up to The Gambler and it's clear from how the album glistens and shimmers, Kenny was intended to be a consolidation of his crossover success. Actually, it could even be seen as the album where Rogers leaps from his self-created pigeonhole as a country singer -- a distinction that always seemed a bit like a commercial necessity by Kenny, as it was the easiest market for him to conquer in the mid-'70s -- and became a middle of the road pop star, a move aided considerably by this album's lovely smash hit "You Decorated My Life." Apart from the "Gambler"-esque "Coward of the County," there aren't many flat-out country tunes here, and even that tune is a bit cartoonishly country in both its story and arrangement. The rest of the album is heavy on grandiose ballads like "I Want to Make You Smile" and splashy showpieces like "Tulsa Turnaround," which blasts and blares like a Vegas showstopper. That's not the only tune that feels a bit campy: "Santiago Midnight Moonlight" is a breezy beach tune that cribs from Jimmy Buffett and "In and Out of Your Heart" pulsates with a TV-show disco beat, while "Old Folks" -- whose electric piano recalls Billy Joel -- lays on the schmaltz pretty heavily. Of course, the appeal of Kenny is that it is a schmaltzy, shameless album, perhaps the most schmaltzy and shameless of Rogers' career, but what's endearing about it is that he had yet to sink into the formless adult contemporary that turned his albums after Eyes That See in the Dark into snooze-fests, yet he had sharpened and broadened his tastes from his too-soft and sleepy early country albums, making Kenny the almost perfect mid-point between his first pop hits and his complacent latter-day ones. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
You Turn the Light On L. Anderson, Sean Geyer Kenny Rogers
You Decorated My Life Bob Morrison, Debbie Hupp Kenny Rogers
She's a Mystery Kenny Rogers
Goodbye Marie Mel McDaniel Kenny Rogers
Tulsa Turnaround Larry Collins, Alex Harvey Kenny Rogers
I Want to Make You Smile Kenny Rogers
Santiago Midnight Moonlight Kenny Rogers
One Man's Woman Steve Glassmeyer Kenny Rogers
In and Out of Your Heart Kenny Rogers
Old Folks Kenny Rogers
Coward of the County Billy Edd Wheeler, Roger Bowling Kenny Rogers

Credits

Donna McElroy (Vocals), Donna McElroy (Vocals (Background)), Tommy Allsup (Guitar), Bill Justis (String Arrangements), Bobby Wood (Piano), Bobby Wood (Keyboards), Buzz Cason (Vocals), Buzz Cason (Vocals (Background)), Lea Jane Berinati (Vocals), Lea Jane Berinati (Vocals (Background)), Thomas Brannon (Vocals), Thomas Brannon (Vocals (Background)), Larry Butler (Producer), Larry Butler (Remixing), Jimmy Capps (Guitar), Jerry Carrigan (Drums), Todd Cerney (Vocals (Background)), Johnny Christopher (Guitar), Charles Cochran (Keyboards), Chuck Cochran (Piano), Bobby Daniels (Drums), Bobby Daniels (Vocals), Bobby Daniels (Vocals (Background)), Shane Keister (Piano), Shane Keister (Keyboards), Randy Dorman (Guitar), Randy Dorman (Vocals), Ray Edenton (Guitar), Don Gant (Vocals), Don Gant (Vocals (Background)), Steve Glassmeyer (Guitar), Steve Glassmeyer (Keyboards), Steve Glassmeyer (Saxophone), Steve Glassmeyer (Vocals), Steve Glassmeyer (Vocals (Background)), Gene Golden (Piano), Gene Golden (Keyboards), Gene Golden (Vocals), Richard Harper (Guitar), Yvonne Hodges (Vocals), Yvonne Hodges (Vocals (Background)), Chuck Jacobs (Bass), Larry Keith (Guitar), Larry Keith (Piano), Larry Keith (Keyboards), Kenny Rogers (Vocals), Kenny Rogers (Main Performer), Dave Kirby (Guitar), Sheldon Kurland (Strings), Sheldon Kurland (Group), Harold Lee (Engineer), Glenn Meadows (Mastering), Farrell Morris (Percussion), Joe Osborne (Bass), Hargus "Pig" Robbins (Piano), Hargus "Pig" Robbins (Keyboards), Billy Sanford (Guitar), Jerry Shook (Guitar), Edgar Strubble (Synthesizer), Edgar Strubble (Piano), Edgar Strubble (Vocals (Background)), Edgar Strubble (Clavinet), Edgar Strubble (String Arrangements), Bobby Thompson (Banjo), Bergen White (Vocals), Bergen White (Vocals (Background)), Reggie Young (Guitar), Bob Moore (Bass), Kevin Gray (?), Kevin Gray (Mastering Assistant), Reid Miles (Photography), Mike Ragogna (?), Mike Ragogna (Mastering Coordination), Edgar Struble (Synthesizer), Edgar Struble (Piano), Edgar Struble (Vocals (Background)), Edgar Struble (Clavinet), Edgar Struble (String Arrangements), Bill Burks (Art Direction), Bill Burks (Design), Murray Brenman (Design), Arp (Synthesizer), Arp (Clavinet), Steve Hoffman (Mastering), David Briggs (Piano), Billy Sherrill (Engineer)
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Wikipedia: Kenny (album)
Top
Kenny
Kenny cover
Studio album by Kenny Rogers
Released 1979
Recorded 1979
Genre Country
Length 36:02
Label United Artists Group
Producer Larry Butler
Professional reviews
Kenny Rogers chronology
The Kenny Rogers Singles Album
(1979)
Kenny
(1979)
Gideon
(1980)

Kenny is a 1979 music album by Kenny Rogers. The album is noted to mix music genres and is heavily influenced by the disco sound that was popular at this time. However neither of the album's two singles "Coward of the County" (a strong country story song) and "You Decorated My Life" (a love ballad) show any great disco influence. The album's opening track "You Turn The Light On" does, however, and features Rogers atypically-singing such lyrics as "ooh baby." "Santiago Midnight Moonlight," "She's A Mystery" and "In and Out of Your Heart" are also disco-esque.

"Tulsa Turnaround" is a reworking of an earlier song Rogers recorded with The First Edition. While the original had a jazzy arrangement, on this it is more disco/rock. In addition to the disco sound, Rogers also includes numbers to satisfy his country following, such as the ballads "You Decorated My Life" and "I Want To Make You Smile," the cheating song "One Man's Woman" and the story-telling "Coward of the County." One of his earlier works was also a hit on the internet, the song was about the downfalls of a Chinese Emperor and the woes of the king's mother. "Kenny Wong Is His Own Brother" explores the story with a disco mix tune and a slight Mexican guitar.

The album was a huge success for Rogers, reaching #5 in the US pop charts and #1 in the country charts (where it stayed for a total of 25 weeks). It also saw similar success in the UK reaching the top 10 of pop charts there too. It also saw more sales when released on Compact disc. In 2007 the album was issued as a two album set on one CD, the other album included on the disc being the self-titled Kenny Rogers (album) from 1976.

Track listing

  1. "You Turn the Light On" [3:03]
  2. "You Decorated My Life" [3:38]
  3. "She's a Mystery" [2:54]
  4. "Goodbye Marie" [2:47]
  5. "Tulsa Turnaround" [2:52]
  6. "I Want to Make You Smile" [3:20]
  7. "Santiago Midnight Moonlight" [3:14]
  8. "One Man's Woman" [3:45]
  9. "In and Out of Your Heart" [3:23]
  10. "Old Folks" [2:44]
  11. "Coward of the County" [4:22]
Preceded by
The Gambler by Kenny Rogers
Top Country Albums number-one album of the year
1980
Succeeded by
9 to 5 and Odd Jobs by Dolly Parton

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kenny (album)" Read more

 

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