David Foster (album)
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David Foster | ||
Studio album by David Foster | ||
Released | 1986 | |
Recorded | Lighthouse Studios, North Hollywood, California | |
Genre | Pop | |
Length | 40:54 | |
Label | Atlantic Records | |
Producer(s) | Humberto Gatica & David Foster | |
Professional reviews | ||
---|---|---|
David Foster chronology | ||
The Best of Me (1983) |
David Foster (1986) |
The Symphony Sessions (1988) |
David Foster is a self-titled solo album released in 1986. The album is mainly instrumental with two duet-style songs featuring rare vocals from Foster himself. This work led to Foster receiving the Juno Award for "Instrumental Artist of the Year" in 1986 and 1987, and a Grammy Award nomination for "Best Pop Instrumental Performance" in 1986. Co-producer Humberto Gatica was also nominated for a Grammy Award in 1986 for "Best Engineered Recording" for this album.
Contents |
[edit] Background and writing
After producing numerous commercially successful albums for other artists during the 1980s, David Foster released his first major label debut in 1986. The album features many of Foster's friends and collaborators from the Los Angeles-area studio musician scene who had worked with him on previous releases including his first solo album "The Best of Me" and the St. Elmo's Fire soundtrack.
The first track is the instrumental version of the "Love Theme" from the 1985 film St. Elmo's Fire, which also appears on the film's soundtrack. Foster received a Juno Award for "Producer of the Year" for that album in 1986. A video was produced for this song, featuring a storyline where Foster is writing the song on piano interspersed with scenes of him pursuing a girl riding on horseback.
The second track is from the 1985 Spielberg film The Color Purple. The CD soundtrack for this film features a different track entitled "High Life/Proud Theme" (1:12), and it is not clear if this version actually appears in the movie. The song was composed by award winning producer Quincy Jones, his frequent co-writer Rod Temperton and arranger Jeremy Lubbock. All three were nominated for the Academy Award for "Original Music Score" in 1985 for their work on this soundtrack.
The third track "Flight of the Snowbirds" is inspired by the Canadian Forces Snowbirds aerobatic flying team.
The fifth track "The Best of Me" is the first vocal song on the album featuring a duet between Olivia Newton-John and Foster. The two had previously worked together on the 1983 Two of a Kind soundtrack, including the songs "Take a Chance" and "Shakin' You". This soft rock single was a Top 10 hit on the Billboard AC charts in the U.S. and a Top 40 hit in Canada. The accompanying music video features Newton-John and Foster singing and playfully spending time together in a recording studio. Foster's co-writers on this song are Jeremy Lubbock and Richard Marx who would provide background vocals on other Foster productions before becoming a major solo artist on his own.
The sixth track "tapDANCE" is from the 1985 film White Nights starring the late Gregory Hines. Hines provides the tap dancing heard in this song, likely from a scene in the movie.
The seventh track "Who's Gonna Love You Tonight" is the second song featuring vocals, with Foster and Richard Page who is best known as the lead vocalist for Mr. Mister (of "Broken Wings" fame). This pop rock-style song was written with well known lyricist John Bettis and the late Keith Diamond.
The instruments used in the recording of this album were considered cutting-edge technology at the time, including the newly invented synthaxe guitar, as well as host of synthesizers and sequencers including the Wendell Junior, Kurzweil, Fairlight, PPG 2.3 with Waveterm, Jupiter 8, Emulator 3, Matrix 12 Oberheim system and the Linn LM-1 drum machine with A.M.S.
[edit] Track Listing
- "Love Theme from St. Elmo's Fire (instrumental)" (Foster) - 3:28
- "Theme from The Color Purple (Mailbox/Proud Theme)" (Quincy Jones, Rod Temperton, Jeremy Lubbock) - 3:45
- "Flight of the Snowbirds" (Foster, Lubbock) - 5:26
- "All That My Heart Can Hold" (Foster, Lubbock, Richard Marx) - 3:54
- "The Best of Me" (Foster, Lubbock, Marx) - 4:09
- "tapDANCE" (Foster, Jerry Hey, Tommy Keane) - 4:02
- "Who's Gonna Love You Tonight" (John Bettis, Keith Diamond, Foster) - 3:52
- "Elizabeth" (Foster, Keane) - 4:22
- "Playing with Fire" (Foster, Michael Landau) - 4:30
- "Sajé" (Foster) - 3:08
[edit] Singles
The following singles were released from the album, with the highest charting positions listed.
# | Title | Date | Hot 100 | AC | CAN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "The Best of Me" | 1986 | 80 | 6 | 32 |
2. | "Who's Gonna Love You Tonight" | 1986 |
[edit] Album credits
[edit] Personnel
- David Foster - keyboards
- Olivia Newton-John - Vocal duet on "The Best of Me"
- Richard Page - vocals on "Who's Gonna Love You Tonight"
- David Boruff - sax solos
- Chicago Horns on "Playing with Fire" - James Pankow, Walter Parazaider, Lee Loughnane
- Lee Ritenour - synthaxe guitar on "Playing with Fire"
- Michael Landau - guitars
- Tris Imboden - drum overdubs
- Carlos Vega - additional drum overdubs
- Jerry Hey & David Foster - Horn arrangements on "tapDANCE"
- Horns on "tapDANCE" - Jerry Hey, Gary Grant, Chuck Findlay, Bill Rickenbach, Larry Williams
- Gary Herbig - sax solo on "tapDANCE"
- Gregory Hines - taps on "tapDANCE"
[edit] Production
- Producers - Humberto Gatica & David Foster
- Arrangements - David Foster
- Engineer & Mixer - Humberto Gatica
- Assistant Engineers - Tommy Vicari, Woody Woodruff, Laura Livingston, Larry Ferguson, Glen Holguin, Rick Holbrook, Claudio Ordenes
- Art Direction - Bob Defrin
- Design - Jodi Rovin
- Photography - Aaron Rapoport
- LP mastering - Bernie Grundman
- CD mastering - Barry Diament
[edit] References
- David Foster - history from FozFan.com