Heartbreak Station is the third studio album by American rock band Cinderella, released in 1990 through Mercury Records. It hit #19 in the US and went platinum for shipping a million albums there the same year.[4] The band's two previous efforts, Night Songs and Long Cold Winter, had both gone double platinum and reaching triple during the 1990s,[5] and had each landed in the US top ten while featuring a US top 20 hit, Heartbreak Station achieved none of these things. Vocalist Tom Keifer has stated on several occasions that this is his favorite Cinderella record [citation needed]. The album featured three singles, which were "Shelter Me", hitting #36 in the US, the title track, which made #44, and "The More Things Change", which didn't chart. If compared to the two previous records, this album presents some differences in its musical style, being more oriented towards blues heavy hard rock instead of glam metal and being more evidently influenced by The Rolling Stones and Aerosmith.[1]
Track listing
All songs are written by Tom Keifer, except for "Love's Got Me Doin' Time" by Tom Keifer/Eric Brittingham.
- "The More Things Change" – 4:22
- "Love's Got Me Doin' Time" – 5:19
- "Shelter Me" – 4:47
- "Heartbreak Station" – 4:28
- "Sick for the Cure" – 3:59
- "One for Rock and Roll" – 4:29
- "Dead Man's Road" – 6:38
- "Make Your Own Way" – 4:15
- "Electric Love" – 5:23
- "Love Gone Bad" – 4:20
- "Winds of Change" – 5:34
Album credits
Other musicians:
- The Memphis Horns: Andrew Love saxophone, Dennis Ruello baritone saxophone, Wayne Jackson trumpet
- Jay Levin - steel guitar
- Jay Davidson - saxophone, piano
- Ken Hensley - organ
- Rod Roddy - keyboards
- Brian O'Neal - keyboards
- Rick Criniti - keyboards
- Bashiri Johnson - percussion
- Roy McDonald - programming
- Elaine Foster, Sharon Foster, Tara Pellerin, Carla Benson, Evette Benton, Curtis King, Brenda King, Tawatha Agee, Eric Troyer - backing vocals
Studio crew: Bobby Schumann - Guitars, J. Harman - Drums
- Produced by John Jansen and Tom Keifer
- Engineered by Gary Lyons
Charts and certifications
Singles
Other
Little Richard played a preacher in the video of "Shelter Me".
References
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| Videos |
- Rocked, Wired & Bluesed - The Greatest Video Hits
- In Concert
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