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Rock n' Roll Nights | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | February 1979 | |||
Recorded | 1978–1979, Mushroom Studios, Vancouver, Canada | |||
Genre | Rock, soft rock | |||
Length | 36:50 | |||
Label | Mercury | |||
Producer | BTO, Jim Vallance | |||
BTO chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [2] |
Rock n' Roll Nights is the eighth studio album by Canadian rock band BTO, released in 1979. This record was one of three BTO albums that did not feature co-founder Randy Bachman. Rock n' Roll Nights is also one of the two albums from this band to feature Jim Clench, formerly of April Wine. This LP generated worldwide sales of only about 350,000 copies, though a single from the album called "Heartaches" managed to reach #60 on the U.S. charts and cracked the Top 40 in Canada. Rock n' Roll Nights is a rare find on CD, as it was released only for a short time on that format in 1990.
The band used multiple outside songwriters on Rock n' Roll Nights, including Jim Vallance of Prism and Bryan Adams (who penned the song, "Wastin' Time"). C.F. Turner and Jim Clench would later appear as session musicians for Adams' debut album in 1980, on which Adams recorded his own version of "Wastin' Time".
The band played two songs — "Heartaches", the last BTO single to chart, and "Jamaica"—live on American Bandstand in February 1979 to support the Rock n' Roll Nights album release. Producer Vallance played the piano for the TV taping of "Heartaches". During an interview segment on the show, Dick Clark discusses concerns with the band about the increasing and dominating popularity of disco music at the time. Many consider disco and the decline of guitar-based hard rock in the late 1970s to be among the reasons that both Street Action and Rock n' Roll Nights sold so poorly.
After touring to support Rock n' Roll Nights through much of 1979, BTO officially disbanded in early 1980. They would not reform until 1983, with Randy Bachman back in the group.
The song "Rock and Roll Hell" would later be re-recorded, with new verses and a new arrangement, by Kiss in 1982, for the album Creatures of the Night . In 2024, Bryan Adams released a recording of the Kiss version of the song as a limited-edition double A-side seven-inch single via his independent label, Bad Records. [3]
The song "Jamaica" would later be re-recorded, with new words, as "Kristina" by Rick Springfield on his 1982 album Success Hasn't Spoiled Me Yet .
with:
Chart (1979) | Peak position |
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US Billboard 200 [4] | 165 |
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