In the Spotlight | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | August 5, 2011 | |||
Studio |
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Genre | Hard rock [2] | |||
Length | 40:40 | |||
Label | Cherry Red | |||
Producer |
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Suzi Quatro chronology | ||||
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In the Spotlight is the fifteenth studio album by the American singer-songwriter and bass guitar player Suzi Quatro.
The seeds for the album were sown when Mike Chapman, Quatro's original producer and composer of most of her hits, approached her with plans to take her back to her roots. Their reunion resulted in this modern take on Quatro's original attitude, which shows the influence she has had on modern female artists. "Strict Machine", a song originally performed by Goldfrapp, even contains a two line teaser from Quatro's number one hit "Can the Can", to show the similarities of the two tracks. [3]
When the album was released, it received many positive reviews— Mojo rated the album three stars, while AllMusic rated it three-and-half stars out of five, commenting that except for one track, "In the Spotlight is an impressive comeback, which admirably doesn't rely solely on nostalgia to make itself heard." [3] In September and October 2011, soon after the album was released, Quatro embarked on the 21-date sold-out Rocks the Spotlight Tour of Australia, also with great reviews.
In the Spotlight was first released in Australia on August 5, 2011. [4] Then the album was released in Germany on August 19, 2011. [5] It was released in the rest of the world (including the US) on August 29, 2011. [6]
Victory Tischler-Blue produced the official music video for Suzi Quatro's "Strict Machine", a track from the album. This track is a cover of Goldfrapp's "Strict Machine", but Quatro's version of the song contains two extra lines from her own number one hit "Can the Can" (to show the similarity of the two songs' tunes). [3]
On November 16, 2011 the official music video was released via the official Suzi Quatro YouTube channel. It includes live footage from Quatro's September/October 2011 Rocks the Spotlight Tour of Australia and the extra two lines from "Can the Can". [7]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [3] |
The Gap | [8] |
laut.de | [9] |
Ulf Kubanke reviewed the album for laut.de. He rated the album four out of stars. [9] Constantin Aravanlis reviewed the album favorably for Monsters and Critics.de. [10] Gerald C. Stocker reviewed the album for The Gap . He rated the album two out of five stars. [8]
Mojo magazine rated the album three out of five stars.[ citation needed ]
Alan Pedder of Wears the Trousers magazine reviewed the single "Whatever Love Is" and went on to comment about some other album tracks. Rhian Jones for the same publication reviewed the album itself. Pedder commented favorably on two tracks, unfavorably on two tracks, and did not comment on seven tracks. Jones commented favorably (directly or indirectly) on eight tracks, unfavorably on one track, and did not comment on two tracks. [11] [12]
Reviewing the single, Pedder wrote that Quatro's "Whatever Love Is" "is squarely aimed at her existing fans", and described "Strict Machine" and "Breaking Dishes" as "ropey covers" but concluded that "Hard Headed Woman" "is a much better fit for Quatro's seasoned, raspy vocals". [11] By contrast, reviewing the album, Jones wrote that "Breaking Dishes" "yield[s] surprisingly well to a fundamentalist glam treatment and the gutsiness of Quatro's vocal approach". She also wrote that Quatro "has a decent stab at the wistful rock splendour of Yeah Yeah Yeahs' 'Turn Into'" and concluded that "despite one or two shaky moments then, In The Spotlight is a warm and triumphant slice of retro-rock". [12]
Jon O'Brien of AllMusic commented favorably on nine tracks, unfavorably on one track, and did not comment on one track. He wrote that Quatro's "Strict Machine" is "a guitar-chugging mash-up of Goldfrapp's electro-pop reinvention in "Strict Machine"; [with] her own 1973 U.K. chart-topper "Can the Can," cleverly referencing the subtle similarities between the two". O'Brien concluded that "a misguided attempt at cod-reggae aside ("Hurt with You"), In the Spotlight is an impressive comeback, which admirably doesn't rely solely on nostalgia to make itself heard". He rated the album three-and-a-half stars out of five. [3]
The musicians Nat Allison, Jez Davies, Owen Martin, and Mike Chapman contributed to all of the tracks except "Singing with Angels". [1] : 11
Track [1] : 12 | Title [1] : 12 | Writer(s) | Guest musician(s) [1] : 11 | Original artist(s) | Length [13] |
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1. | "A Girl Like Me" | Mike Chapman [1] : 4 | 4:31 | ||
2. | "Whatever Love Is" | Chapman. Holly Knight [1] : 4 | 4:44 | ||
3. | "Spotlight" | Chapman [1] : 5 | 3:21 | ||
4. | "Strict Machine" | Allison Goldfrapp, Will Gregory, Nick Batt [1] : 8 [14] [15] | The Neighborhood Bullys | Goldfrapp [15] | 3:10 |
5. | "Breaking Dishes" (originally "Breakin' Dishes") | Christopher Stewart, Terius Nash [1] : 8 [16] | The Neighborhood Bullys | Rihanna [16] | 4:01 |
6. | "Rosie Rose" | Chapman [1] : 8 | 4:04 | ||
7. | "Hurt with You" | Suzi Quatro [1] : 9 | Ray Bevis, Toby Gucklhorn, Dick Hanson | 4:18 | |
8. | "Hot Kiss" | Todd Morse, Juliette Lewis, Kemble Walters, Jason Womack [1] : 10 [17] See Note 1 below. | The Neighborhood Bullys | Juliette and the Licks [18] | 2:47 |
9. | "Turn Into" | Brian Chase, Nicholas Zinner, Karen Orzolek [1] : 10 [19] | The Neighborhood Bullys | Yeah Yeah Yeahs [19] | 3:48 |
10. | "Hard Headed Woman" | Claude Demetrius [1] : 10 [20] | Elvis Presley [3] See Note 2 below. | 2:02 | |
11. (Bonus track) | "Singing with Angels" | Quatro [1] : 10 | James Burton, The Jordanaires (misspelled as "The Jordinaires" in the CD booklet) | 3:54 |
Note 1 — according to the In the Spotlight CD booklet, "Morse/Lewis/Walters/Womack" wrote "Hot Kiss". [1] : 10 According to AllMusic, the only composers were "Lewis, Morse". [21]
Note 2 — it is generally accepted that Elvis Presley is the original artist for "Hard Headed Woman". [3] Wears the Trousers Magazine (in its reviews of the album and of the associated single "Whatever Love Is") refers to "Wanda Jackson’s ‘Hard Headed Woman’". [11] [12]
Victory Tischler-Blue produced both of the bonus enhanced video tracks. [22] : 9
Track [23] | Title [23] | Writer(s) [22] : 9 | Guest musician(s) [1] : 11 | Original artist(s) | Length [23] |
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1. | "Empty Rooms" | Suzi Quatro | 3:36 | ||
2. | "Make Love to Me" | Quatro | 4:06 | ||
3. | "Why Do Rainbows Die" | Quatro | 3:53 | ||
4. | "Truck Stop" | Quatro | 3:31 | ||
5. | "If Ever There Was a Reason" | Quatro | 4:20 | ||
6. | "Touch the Child in Me" | Quatro | 3:17 | ||
7. | "Three Time Loser" | Quatro | 3:09 | ||
8. | "One Dance Too Long" | Quatro | 3:25 | ||
9. (Bonus enhanced video track) | "Singing with Angels" | Quatro [1] : 10 | James Burton, The Jordanaires (misspelled as "The Jordinaires" in the CD booklet) | 6:00 | |
10. (Bonus enhanced video track) | "Strict Machine" | Allison Goldfrapp, Will Gregory, Nick Batt [1] : 8 [14] [15] | The Neighborhood Bullys | Goldfrapp [15] | 3:08 |
"Singing with Angels"
Date | Label | Format | Catalogue |
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August 5, 2011 | Cherry Red | CD | CDBRED 511 [13] |
October 29, 2012 | Cherry Red | Box set | Box set, In the Spotlight Deluxe Edition: CR CDBOX8 [23] Disc 1, In the Spotlight: CR CDBOX 8/A [23] |
Glam rock is a style of rock music that developed in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s and was performed by male musicians who wore flamboyant and feminine clothing, makeup, and hairstyles, particularly platform shoes and glitter, and female musicians who wore masculine clothing. Glam artists drew on diverse sources across music and throwaway pop culture, ranging from bubblegum pop and 1950s rock and roll to cabaret, science fiction, and complex art rock. The flamboyant clothing and visual styles of performers were often camp or androgynous, and have been described as playing with other gender roles. Glitter rock was a more extreme version of glam rock.
Susan Kay Quatro is an American singer, bass guitarist, songwriter and actor. In the 1970s, she scored a string of singles that found success in Europe and Australia, with both "Can the Can" (1973) and "Devil Gate Drive" (1974) reaching No. 1 in several countries.
If You Knew Suzi... is the fifth studio album by Suzi Quatro, released at the end of 1978, but with a 1979 copyright date. By August 2012 this was still Quatro's highest-charting album in the United States. The album also yielded Quatro's biggest US single hit, a duet with Chris Norman named "Stumblin' In" (which reached number 4 on both the Billboard Hot 100 and the Billboard Adult Contemporary charts. It also had an advertising billboard on Sunset Boulevard.
Nicholas Barry Chinn is an English-American songwriter and record producer. Together with Mike Chapman he had a long string of hit singles in the US and UK in the 1970s and early 1980s, including several international number-one records. The duo wrote hits for the Sweet, Suzi Quatro, Mud, New World, Arrows, Racey, Smokie, Tina Turner, Huey Lewis and the News, Exile and Toni Basil.
Michael Donald Chapman is an Australian record producer and songwriter who was a major force in the British pop music industry in the 1970s. He created a string of hit singles for artists including the Sweet, Suzi Quatro, Smokie, Mud and Racey with business partner Nicky Chinn, creating a sound that became identified with the "Chinnichap" brand. He later produced breakthrough albums for Blondie and the Knack. Chapman received a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in the 2014 Australia Day Honours.
"Strict Machine" is an electronic dance song written by British electronic music duo Goldfrapp and Nick Batt for Goldfrapp's second studio album, Black Cherry (2003). It was produced by Goldfrapp and describes laboratory rats in neuroscience experiments. Alison Goldfrapp read in a newspaper about experiments in which scientists stimulated rats' brains so that the rats would feel joy when following commands. She was inspired to write "Strict Machine" based on images of the experiment and "more human aspects of machines and sex and control". Actress Gwendoline Christie features on the record sleeve disguised in a rabbit mask.
"I Got Lost in His Arms" is a song from the 1946 musical Annie Get Your Gun, written by Irving Berlin. It was performed by Ethel Merman in the original production of the musical.
"You Can't Get a Man with a Gun" is a song from the 1946 musical Annie Get Your Gun, written by Irving Berlin. It was originally performed by Ethel Merman.
"Can the Can" is the second solo single by American singer-songwriter Suzi Quatro and her first to reach number one in the UK, spending a single week at the top of the chart in June 1973. It also reached number one on the European and Australian charts; Quatro achieved her most consistent success throughout her career in these markets. The single belatedly became a hit in the US peaking at number 56 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1976. It was re-released as a single in the UK, with "Devil Gate Drive" as the B-side, in 1984, but failed to chart. The single made the charts again in 1987 in the UK at number 87, it also appeared on her 1995 album What Goes Around.
Victory Tischler-Blue is an American film producer, director, writer, musician and photographer. She was born and raised in Newport Beach, California. Tischler-Blue began working in the entertainment industry at age 17, using the name Vicki Blue as the bassist in the American all-girl teenage rock band The Runaways. After the demise of the band, she was cast as Cindy by director Rob Reiner in This Is Spinal Tap. Her film Edgeplay was based on her tenure in The Runaways.
"48 Crash" is Suzi Quatro's third solo single and was released after "Can the Can". It was included on her debut album Suzi Quatro. It later appeared as a track on her 1995 album What Goes Around. The single peaked at number three in the UK in July 1973, and number one in Australia for one week. It also hit number two in Germany, and charted well in other European countries.
Suzi Quatro is the debut solo studio album by the American singer-songwriter and bass guitarist of the same name. The LP was originally released in October 1973, by the record label Rak in most territories. The album was released under Bell Records in the United States and Canada, EMI Records in Japan, and Columbia Records in some European countries. It was titled Can the Can in Australia.
"Stumblin' In" is a song written by Mike Chapman and Nicky Chinn, performed by Chris Norman and Suzi Quatro. Originally released as a standalone single, it was later added to some editions of the Quatro album If You Knew Suzi... It was Norman's first single as a solo artist.
Back to the Drive is the eleventh studio album by Suzi Quatro. Released in March 2006, it was her comeback album, and her first since 1990's Oh Suzi Q.. Produced by Sweet guitarist Andy Scott and Steve Grant with input from Quatro's classic era producer Mike Chapman, this release features backing vocals by Shirlie Roden, ex-husband Len Tuckey on guitar, and includes her daughter, Laura Quatro, duetting with her on the download-only single "I'll Walk Through the Fire With You".
Aggro-Phobia is the fourth studio album by Suzi Quatro, recorded in the autumn of 1976. It is the only one of her albums to be co-produced by Mickie Most.
Suzi ... and Other Four Letter Words, released in 1979, is the sixth studio album by American singer-songwriter, bass guitar player, and actress Suzi Quatro. By August 2012 this was still Quatro's highest-charting album in Norway and her second-highest-charting album in the United States .
Rock Hard is the seventh studio album by American rock musician Suzi Quatro, released in October 1980 by Dreamland Records, her first and only release by the label. It was recorded over a period of one month in 1980, at United Western Studios, in Hollywood. It features three prolific guest backing vocalists, including Paul Delph, Michael Des Barres, and Andrea Robinson. It is notably her last album to chart anywhere for twenty-six years, until she released Back to the Drive, in 2006. The album featured the songs "Rock Hard", "Glad All Over", and "Lipstick" which were all released as singles. The aforementioned title track was a commercial success, peaking at number 9 in Australia, but only peaked at number 68 in the UK, while "Lipstick" was only a moderate success peaking at number 46 in Australia, and at number 51 in US. "Glad All Over", a cover version of a song originally by the Dave Clark Five, unlike the other singles was the only one to chart in Belgium, peaking at number 25.
Main Attraction is the eighth studio album by American rock musician Suzi Quatro, released in November 1982, her first and only release by Polydor Records. The album was recorded over a period of four months at The Studio Toppersfield, in Essex, England with the sessions starting in late 1981, and ending in early 1982. The album is notably Quatro's only studio album not to contain any cover versions of songs by other artists, and she had a hand in composing each track, with the exception of the sixth track "Two Miles Out of Georgia", which was solely written by Chris Andrews. The album was her last recording of original material for four years, until she released Annie Get Your Gun – 1986 London Cast, and it was her last studio album of the 1980s and her last studio album for eight years, until she released Oh, Suzi Q., in 1990.
Annie Get Your Gun – 1986 London Cast is an album from the first London revival of Irving Berlin's musical Annie Get Your Gun, starring American rock musician Suzi Quatro as Annie Oakley and Eric Flynn as Frank Butler. The revival was a David Gilmore Chichester Festival Theatre production. It toured in the UK and then moved to the Aldwych Theatre in London's West End.
What Goes Around – Greatest & Latest is the eleventh studio album by rock singer-songwriter and bassist Suzi Quatro, released in 1995 by CMC International Records. It features re-recordings of her original recordings, spanning from the 1970s and features four new tracks, one a cover version of Bruce Springsteen's song "Born to Run".
From the studios of the brilliant Victory Tischler Blue – here is the official video for Suzi Quatro's Strict Machine. It includes live footage from Suzi's recent Rocks the Spotlight Tour (Sept/Oct 2011) of Australia. Suzi's version of the Goldfrapp song is on her new album In the Spotlight.