Strangers in the Wind

Strangers in the Wind
Studio album by Bay City Rollers
Released 1978
Recorded 1978
Genre Pop, rock
Label Arista
Producer Harry Maslin
Bay City Rollers chronology
It's a Game
(1977)It's a Game1977
Strangers in the Wind
(1978)
Elevator
(1979)Elevator1979
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
Billboardnot rated link

Strangers in the Wind is a 1978 rock album by the Bay City Rollers. It was the group's sixth original studio album, and second consecutive disc to feature the production work of Harry Maslin, who produced hits for Air Supply.

Early 1978 had seen a reunion of the Rollers' most successful line-up as bassist Alan Longmuir, a founding member, re-joined the band after a two-year hiatus, now on rhythm guitar. The group timed the release of their new album to coincide with their very own network television series, The Krofft Superstar Hour Starring the Bay City Rollers, a Saturday morning NBC show.

Unfortunately, the kiddie format did little to push record sales for the Rollers, who were over two years removed from their phenomenon stage. The lush, mature soft-rock of Strangers in the Wind did not find an audience, and each of three singles failed to hit the charts.

The band regrouped again with another new line-up and a name change for 1979's Elevator.

Strangers in the Wind was reissued on CD with 1 bonus track in October 2007 ("All of the World Is Falling in Love (single version)").

Track listing

Side one

  1. "Another Rainy Day in New York City" (Eric Faulkner, Stuart Wood)
  2. "All of the World Is Falling in Love" (Faulkner, Wood)
  3. "Where Will I Be Now" (Chris East)
  4. "Back on the Street" (Faulkner, Wood)
  5. "Strangers in the Wind" (Faulkner, Wood)

Side two

  1. "Love Brought Me Such a Magical Thing" (Barry Kirsch, Charlie Spencer)
  2. "If You Were My Woman" (Faulkner, Wood)
  3. "Every Tear I Cry" (Iain Sutherland)
  4. "Shoorah Shoorah for Hollywood" (Faulkner, Wood)
  5. "When I Say I Love You (The Pie)" (Iain Sutherland)

Chart Performance

Weekly charts

Chart (1978) Peak
position
Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[1] 61
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[2] 5
US Billboard 200[3] 129

Personnel

Group members

Other personnel

Other information

References

  1. Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (doc). Australian Chart Book, St Ives, N.S.W. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  2. "Oricon Archive - Bay City Rollers".
  3. "Bay City Rollers – Chart history" Billboard 200 for Bay City Rollers. Retrieved March 6, 2016.
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