- Source: Long Cold Winter
Long Cold Winter is the second studio album by American glam metal band Cinderella. It was released in July 1988 on Mercury Records.
The record reached No. 10 in the US and became double-platinum for shipping two million copies in the US by the end of the year, just as their debut album Night Songs had done earlier. It was later certified triple platinum.
The album features four singles, which all charted on the Billboard Hot 100. "Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)", the band's highest-charting single, reached No. 12, "The Last Mile" reached No. 36, "Coming Home" reached No. 20, and "Gypsy Road" hit No. 51, more than a year after the release of the album.
Reception
The album received mixed-to-positive reviews. Music critics remarked the shift of the band's musical style from the clichéd glam metal of their debut to more blues-oriented compositions, but they did not agree in the evaluation of the songs' quality. Contemporary reviewers criticized the album for being "too bluesy" and too derivative of other more famous bands' influences. Only Rock Hard reviewer considered Long Cold Winter "a surprisingly strong rock'n'roll album, rough, unpolished, powerful, but still melodious", and praised Keifer's vocals and the level of songwriting.
Modern reviews are similarly polarized. Steve Huey of AllMusic reviewed Long Cold Winter as "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", and further explained his rating by saying "[not] all of the songs are memorable, but most of them are". Canadian journalist Martin Popoff was harsher in his judgement and wrote that Cinderella strived to be "a next Stones or Aerosmith, not realizing that such talents are both rare and natural, and that without the gift and conviction, [their] attempt reeks of imitation and crass commercialism." Twenty-two years after its release, Geoff Barton re-evaluated the album for the British magazine Classic Rock, praised the band for their change of musical style and called Long Cold Winter "a minor classic." In 2019, Chuck Eddy of Rolling Stone also praised the album and wrote that "in retrospect Long Cold Winter ranks with any blues-rock of the Eighties".
Track listing
Personnel
Cinderella
Tom Keifer – electric, acoustic and steel guitars, harmonica, vocals, producer
Jeff LaBar – guitar (lead guitar on "Falling Apart at the Seams" and "Coming Home")
Eric Brittingham – bass, backing vocals, producer
Fred Coury – drums (credited but does not play on the album)
Additional musicians
Jay Levin – steel guitar
Cozy Powell – drums on all tracks except 5
Denny Carmassi – drums on track 5
Rick Criniti – piano, organ, synthesizer
Kurt Shore, John Webster – keyboards
Paulinho Da Costa – percussion
Production
Andy Johns – producer, engineer
Thom Cadley – assistant engineer
Ryan Dorn – overdubs engineer
Steve Thompson, Michael Barbiero – mixing
George Cowan – mixing assistant
Charts
Certifications
Accolades
References
External links
"Long Cold Winter" at discogs
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Perang Dingin
- Cozy Powell
- J. Lee Thompson
- Perang Dunia II
- SOSUS
- Zooey Deschanel
- Hard rock
- Whataboutisme
- Albert Einstein
- Eli Wallach
- Long Cold Winter
- Cinderella (band)
- Winter of 1962–1963 in the United Kingdom
- Cinderella discography
- Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)
- Heartbreak Station
- Gypsy Road
- Tom Keifer
- Pika
- The Last Mile (song)