So Lucky (Renée Geyer album)
1981 studio album by Renée Geyer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
So Lucky is the seventh studio album by Australian musician Renée Geyer. The album was released in November 1981 and includes Geyer's highest charting single "Say I Love You" which peaked at number 5 in Australia and number 1 in New Zealand.
| So Lucky | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | November 6, 1981 | |||
| Recorded | 1980−81 | |||
| Studio | Shangri-La Studios, Malibu, California | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 38.44 | |||
| Label | Mushroom / Portrait (US) | |||
| Producer | Rob Fraboni, Ricky Fataar | |||
| Renée Geyer chronology | ||||
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| Singles from So Lucky | ||||
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| Alternative cover | ||||
US edition | ||||
The album was released by Portrait Records in the United States of America in 1982 under the title Reneé Geyer. The songs were re-ordered. It was her second album released in that territory following the Polydor Records' Moving Along in 1977, which was also titled Reneé Geyer.
Track listing
- Vinyl/ cassette (L 37554)
Side One
- "Do You Know What I Mean" (Lee Michaels) - 3.20
- "Baby I've Been Missing You" (Chuck Jackson, Marvin Yancy) - 3.36
- "Say I Love You" (Eddy Grant) - 3.33
- "Come On" (Chuck Berry) - 2.39
- "You Don't Know Nothing About Love" (Jerry Ragovoy) - 3.56
Side Two
- "I Can Feel the Fire" (Ron Wood) - 4.15
- "Good Lovin'" (Renée Geyer, Ricky Fataar, Ian McLaglan, Johnny Lee Schell, Ray O'Hara) - 3.36
- "Everything Good is Bad" (Norman Johnson, Angelo Bond, Greg Perry) - 4.21
- "So Lucky" (Renée Geyer, Ricky Fataar) - 3.42
- "On Your Way Down" (Allen Toussaint) - 5.41
Personnel
- Renée Geyer – vocals, backing vocals
- Johnny Lee Schell – guitars, piano, vocals
- Ian McLaglan – keyboards, vocals
- Ray O'Hara – bass guitar, vocals
- Ricky Fataar – drums, percussion, vocals, keyboards
- William Smith – organ, vocals
- Geoff Hales – percussion
- Bobby Keys – saxophone, vocals
- Blondie Chaplin – vocals
- James Ingram – vocals
- Venetta Fields – vocals
Charts
| Chart (1981–1982) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[1] | 36 |
| New Zealand Albums (RIANZ)[2] | 30 |
