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1979 studio album by Elton John

Victim of Love is the thirteenth studio album by English musician Elton John. It is a disco album, released in 1979 shortly after the peak of disco`s popularity. It was not critically or commercially well-received, and is John`s third lowest charting album to date in the US, after 1986`s Leather Jackets and 1985`s Ice on Fire.

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Álbums chronology

A Single Man
A Single Man
27/10/1978
Victim of Love
Victim of Love
12/10/1979
21 at 33
21 at 33
23/5/1980

Victim of Love

  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 12 Octubre 1979 · Fecha Grabación: Agosto 1979 -
    Discográfica: MCA (US)Rocket (UK) · Estudio de grabación: Musicland Studios (Munich, Germany); Rusk Sound Studios (Hollywood, California, USA) · Productor: Pete Bellotte
    1
    Johnny B. Goode
    Elton John • w: Chuck Berry • 1979 /05 /04 Side 1
    8:06
  • 2
    Warm Love in a Cold World
    Elton John • w: Pete Bellotte, Stefan Wisnet, Gunther Moll • 1979 /05 /04 Side 1
    4:30
  • 3
    Born Bad
    Elton John • w: Bellotte, Geoff Bastow • 1979 /05 /04 Side 1
    5:16
  • 4
    Thunder in the Night
    Elton John • w: Bellotte, Michael Hofmann • 1979 /05 /04 Side 1
    4:40
  • 5
    Spotlight
    Elton John • w: Bellotte, Wisnet, Moll • 1979 /05 /04 Side 1
    4:24
  • 6
    Street Boogie
    Elton John • w: Bellotte, Wisnet, Moll • 1979 /05 /04 Side 1
    3:56
  • 7
    Victim of Love
    Elton John • w: Bellotte, Sylvester Levay, Jerry Rix • 1979 /05 /04 Side 1
    4:52
  • Singles


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    Singles

    A Single Man
    A Single Man
    27/10/1978
    Victim of Love
    Victim of Love
    12/10/1979
    21 at 33
    21 at 33
    23/5/1980
    Victim of Love
    Studio album by
    Released12 October 1979[1]
    RecordedAugust 1979
    Studio
    Genre
    Length35:45
    LabelMCA (US)
    Rocket (UK)
    ProducerPete Bellotte
    Elton John chronology
    The Thom Bell Sessions
    (1979)
    Victim of Love
    (1979)
    21 at 33
    (1980)
    Singles from Victim of Love
    1. "Victim of Love"
      Released: 21 September 1979[2]
    2. "Johnny B. Goode"
      Released: December 1979

    Review

    1979 studio album by Elton John

    Victim of Love is the thirteenth studio album by English musician Elton John. It is a disco album, released in 1979 shortly after the peak of disco`s popularity. It was not critically or commercially well-received, and is John`s third lowest charting album to date in the US, after 1986`s Leather Jackets and 1985`s Ice on Fire.

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    The title track of the album, however, was moderately successful as a single. It reached No. 31 on the US Billboard Hot 100, No. 38 in Australia and No. 46 in Canada. It also peaked at No. 11 on the Canadian Adult Contemporary chart.[3] In addition, all the tracks on the album reached No. 55 on the US Billboard Disco Top 100 chart.[4]

    Apart from an appearance on the Australian television series Countdown (he was also a comedy regular on the show during the 1980s), John did little marketing for Victim of Love. He did not tour to promote the album.

    Background

    At under 36 minutes, the album is the shortest of Elton John`s career, and is atypical of his recording career in several respects. He neither wrote the songs nor played piano or keyboards, only providing the vocals. Elton John admitted in 1998 that he used the album`s disco direction as a means of "leaping on a bandwagon".[5] It was his first album without any of his original Elton John Band members, which would not happen again until his 2010 collaboration with Leon Russell, The Union. As of 2019,[update] it is also one of only two studio albums (along with A Single Man) without contributions from lyricist Bernie Taupin.

    "Strangers", the B-side of the single of the album`s title track, appeared as a bonus track on the 1998 Mercury reissue of John`s previous album, A Single Man, because it was recorded during those sessions.

    When the album was released as a CD in the 1980s, the track breaks were incorrect. The first 45 seconds of "Spotlight" was part of the previous track, and similar errors occurred in other tracks. In 2003, the album was reissued in a digitally remastered format, with those problems corrected.

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[6]
    Christgau`s Record GuideC−[8]
    The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[9]
    MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide[10]
    The Rolling Stone Album Guide[7]

    The album was panned by critics. The New York Times noted that "John still has an appealing pop-music baritone, but there`s precious little in the way of individuality here."[11] In ranking all of John`s studio albums, Matt Springer of Ultimate Classic Rock placed the album at the bottom of the list.[12] The Rolling Stone Album Guide called it the "nadir" of John`s recorded output.[7]

    Aside from the title track appearing on the deluxe edition of the Diamonds compilation, none of the album’s songs appear on any of John’s numerous greatest hits or career retrospective releases.

    Track listing

    Side one

    1. "Johnny B. Goode" (Chuck Berry) – 8:06
    2. "Warm Love in a Cold World" (Pete Bellotte, Stefan Wisnet, Gunther Moll) – 4:30 (3:22 on older pressings)
    3. "Born Bad" (Bellotte, Geoff Bastow) – 5:16 (6:20 on older pressings)

    Side two

    1. "Thunder in the Night" (Bellotte, Michael Hofmann) – 4:40
    2. "Spotlight" (Bellotte, Wisnet, Moll) – 4:24
    3. "Street Boogie" (Bellotte, Wisnet, Moll) – 3:56
    4. "Victim of Love" (Bellotte, Sylvester Levay, Jerry Rix) – 4:52 (5:02 on older pressings)

    Personnel

    • Elton John – vocals
    • Thor Baldursson – keyboards, arrangements
    • Roy Davies – keyboards
    • Craig Snyder – lead guitar
    • Tim Cansfield – rhythm guitar
    • Steve Lukather – guitar solo on "Warm Love in a Cold World" and "Born Bad"
    • Marcus Miller – bass guitar
    • Keith Forsey – drums
    • Paulinho da Costa – percussion
    • Lenny Pickett – saxophone on "Johnny B. Goode"
    • Michael McDonald – backing vocals on "Victim of Love"
    • Patrick Simmons – backing vocals on "Victim of Love"
    • Stephanie Spruill – backing vocals
    • Julia Waters Tillman – backing vocals
    • Maxine Waters Willard – backing vocals

    Technical personnel

    • Produced by Pete Bellotte
    • Engineer and Mixdown – Peter Luedmann
    • Assistant Engineers – Hans Menzel and Carolyn Tapp
    • Technical Engineer – Roman Olearczuk
    • Mastered by Brian Gardner at Allen Zentz Mastering (Hollywood, California).
    • Music Contractor – Trevor Veitch
    • Production Coordination – Jerry Simpson
    • Project Coordination – Joe Black
    • Photography – David P. Bailey
    • Design – Jubilee Graphics

    Charts

    Chart performance for Victim of Love

    Chart (1979)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[13]

    20

    Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[14]

    28

    New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[15]

    44

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[16]

    18

    UK Albums (OCC)[17]

    41

    US Billboard 200[18]

    35

    Certifications and sales

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Australia (ARIA)[19]

    Gold

    20,000^

    Canada (Music Canada)[20]

    Gold

    50,000^

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

    1979 studio album by Elton John

    Victim of Love is the thirteenth studio album by English musician Elton John. It is a disco album, released in 1979 shortly after the peak of disco`s popularity. It was not critically or commercially well-received, and is John`s third lowest charting album to date in the US, after 1986`s Leather Jackets and 1985`s Ice on Fire.

    The title track of the album, however, was moderately successful as a single. It reached No. 31 on the US Billboard Hot 100, No. 38 in Australia and No. 46 in Canada. It also peaked at No. 11 on the Canadian Adult Contemporary chart.[3] In addition, all the tracks on the album reached No. 55 on the US Billboard Disco Top 100 chart.[4]

    Apart from an appearance on the Australian television series Countdown (he was also a comedy regular on the show during the 1980s), John did little marketing for Victim of Love. He did not tour to promote the album.

    Background

    At under 36 minutes, the album is the shortest of Elton John`s career, and is atypical of his recording career in several respects. He neither wrote the songs nor played piano or keyboards, only providing the vocals. Elton John admitted in 1998 that he used the album`s disco direction as a means of "leaping on a bandwagon".[5] It was his first album without any of his original Elton John Band members, which would not happen again until his 2010 collaboration with Leon Russell, The Union. As of 2019,[update] it is also one of only two studio albums (along with A Single Man) without contributions from lyricist Bernie Taupin.

    "Strangers", the B-side of the single of the album`s title track, appeared as a bonus track on the 1998 Mercury reissue of John`s previous album, A Single Man, because it was recorded during those sessions.

    When the album was released as a CD in the 1980s, the track breaks were incorrect. The first 45 seconds of "Spotlight" was part of the previous track, and similar errors occurred in other tracks. In 2003, the album was reissued in a digitally remastered format, with those problems corrected.

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[6]
    Christgau`s Record GuideC−[8]
    The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[9]
    MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide[10]
    The Rolling Stone Album Guide[7]

    The album was panned by critics. The New York Times noted that "John still has an appealing pop-music baritone, but there`s precious little in the way of individuality here."[11] In ranking all of John`s studio albums, Matt Springer of Ultimate Classic Rock placed the album at the bottom of the list.[12] The Rolling Stone Album Guide called it the "nadir" of John`s recorded output.[7]

    Aside from the title track appearing on the deluxe edition of the Diamonds compilation, none of the album’s songs appear on any of John’s numerous greatest hits or career retrospective releases.

    Track listing

    Side one

    1. "Johnny B. Goode" (Chuck Berry) – 8:06
    2. "Warm Love in a Cold World" (Pete Bellotte, Stefan Wisnet, Gunther Moll) – 4:30 (3:22 on older pressings)
    3. "Born Bad" (Bellotte, Geoff Bastow) – 5:16 (6:20 on older pressings)

    Side two

    1. "Thunder in the Night" (Bellotte, Michael Hofmann) – 4:40
    2. "Spotlight" (Bellotte, Wisnet, Moll) – 4:24
    3. "Street Boogie" (Bellotte, Wisnet, Moll) – 3:56
    4. "Victim of Love" (Bellotte, Sylvester Levay, Jerry Rix) – 4:52 (5:02 on older pressings)

    Personnel

    • Elton John – vocals
    • Thor Baldursson – keyboards, arrangements
    • Roy Davies – keyboards
    • Craig Snyder – lead guitar
    • Tim Cansfield – rhythm guitar
    • Steve Lukather – guitar solo on "Warm Love in a Cold World" and "Born Bad"
    • Marcus Miller – bass guitar
    • Keith Forsey – drums
    • Paulinho da Costa – percussion
    • Lenny Pickett – saxophone on "Johnny B. Goode"
    • Michael McDonald – backing vocals on "Victim of Love"
    • Patrick Simmons – backing vocals on "Victim of Love"
    • Stephanie Spruill – backing vocals
    • Julia Waters Tillman – backing vocals
    • Maxine Waters Willard – backing vocals

    Technical personnel

    • Produced by Pete Bellotte
    • Engineer and Mixdown – Peter Luedmann
    • Assistant Engineers – Hans Menzel and Carolyn Tapp
    • Technical Engineer – Roman Olearczuk
    • Mastered by Brian Gardner at Allen Zentz Mastering (Hollywood, California).
    • Music Contractor – Trevor Veitch
    • Production Coordination – Jerry Simpson
    • Project Coordination – Joe Black
    • Photography – David P. Bailey
    • Design – Jubilee Graphics

    Charts

    Chart performance for Victim of Love

    Chart (1979)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[13]

    20

    Canada Top Albums/CDs (RPM)[14]

    28

    New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[15]

    44

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[16]

    18

    UK Albums (OCC)[17]

    41

    US Billboard 200[18]

    35

    Certifications and sales

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Australia (ARIA)[19]

    Gold

    20,000^

    Canada (Music Canada)[20]

    Gold

    50,000^

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

    DISCOGRAFÍA

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