UPC: 600753649275
Format: LP
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Cinderella: Tom Keifer (vocals, guitars, harmonica); Jeff La Bar (guitar); Eric Brittingham (bass, background vocals); Fred Coury (drums).
Additional personnel: Jay Levin (steel guitar); Rick Criniti (piano, organ, synthesizer, background vocals); Kurt Shore, John Webster (keyboards); Cozy Powell, Denny Carmassi (drums); Paulinho Da Costa (percussion)
Recorded at Bearsville Studios, Bearsville, New York.
Long Cold Winter is a transition album for Cinderella, mixing pop-metal tunes with better hooks than those on Night Songs with a newfound penchant for gritty blues-rock à la the Stones or Aerosmith. The ballads -- the grandiose "Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)" and the excellent, lower-key "Coming Home" -- are what made the album Cinderella's most commercially successful, but the effective combination of pop hooks and tough, swaggering rock & roll on songs like "Gypsy Road" and "Fallin' Apart at the Seams" prevents the album from becoming simply a vehicle for hit singles and keeps it interesting. Not all of the songs are memorable, but most of them are. ~ Steve Huey
Additional personnel: Jay Levin (steel guitar); Rick Criniti (piano, organ, synthesizer, background vocals); Kurt Shore, John Webster (keyboards); Cozy Powell, Denny Carmassi (drums); Paulinho Da Costa (percussion)
Recorded at Bearsville Studios, Bearsville, New York.
Long Cold Winter is a transition album for Cinderella, mixing pop-metal tunes with better hooks than those on Night Songs with a newfound penchant for gritty blues-rock à la the Stones or Aerosmith. The ballads -- the grandiose "Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)" and the excellent, lower-key "Coming Home" -- are what made the album Cinderella's most commercially successful, but the effective combination of pop hooks and tough, swaggering rock & roll on songs like "Gypsy Road" and "Fallin' Apart at the Seams" prevents the album from becoming simply a vehicle for hit singles and keeps it interesting. Not all of the songs are memorable, but most of them are. ~ Steve Huey