Japanese Tears | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by Denny Laine | ||||
Released | December 6, 1980 | |||
Recorded | December 1973-Early 1980 (Rock City, Nashville, Startling Studios, Lympne Castle) | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 47:09 | |||
Label | Polydor Arista Records Takoma Records Scratch Records |
|||
Producer | Denny Laine | |||
Denny Laine chronology | ||||
|
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | (not rated)[1] |
Japanese Tears is the third album by guitarist Denny Laine, released shortly before the demise of Paul McCartney's band Wings, of which Laine was a member. The album was released in 1980 (see 1980 in music).
Contents |
In January 1980, Wings planned a tour of Japan. However, upon the band's arrival at the airport in Japan, Paul McCartney was arrested for marijuana possession. The tour was eventually cancelled, and McCartney then decided to release a solo album (McCartney II) instead of touring, putting Wings on hiatus.
Laine decided to work on his own solo project (his third since joining Wings), and he released a single, "Japanese Tears". It became the title track of his album.
The album also included three previously unreleased Laine compositions -- "Send Me The Heart" (co-written by Paul McCartney), "I Would Only Smile", and "Weep For Love" -- that had been recorded by different versions of Wings between 1973 and 1979 with Laine singing lead. In addition, it featured remakes of the Moody Blues' 1965 hit "Go Now", which Laine and Wings performed on tour, and a 1967 Laine composition, "Say You Don't Mind", that had become a top-20 UK hit in 1972 for Colin Blunstone. Two other songs featured the short-lived Denny Laine Band, which included fellow Wings member Steve Holley on drums and Laine's wife Jo Jo on backing vocals.[2]
This album has been reissued several times, under a variety of titles, on an assortment of labels.
All songs by Denny Laine, except where noted.
The Denny Laine Band
Jimmy McCulloch: Guitars, bass (1974)