UPC: 4988005688811
Format: CD
Release Date: Jan 24, 2012
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Cinderella: Tom Keifer (vocals, guitar, dobro, mandolin, piano); Jeff LeBar (guitar); Eric Brittingham (bass); Fred Coury (drums, percussion, background vocals).
The Memphis Horns: Andrew Love (saxophone); Dennis Ruello (baritone saxophone); Wayne Jackson (trumpet).
Additional personnel: Jay Levin (steel guitar); Jay Davidson (saxophone, piano); Ken Hensley (organ); Rod Roddy, Brian O'Neal, Rick Criniti (keyboards); Bashiri Johnson (percussion); Roy McDonald (programming); Elaine Foster, Sharon Foster, Tara Pellerin, Carla Benson, Evette Benton, Curtis King, Brenda King, Tawatha Agee, Eric Troyer (background vocals).
After successful albums that effectively followed contemporary hard rock trends, Cinderella reached back into the Stones and Aerosmith songbooks and created a sneering, raunchy hard rock album that was artistically their finest moment, even if it didn't reach the same commercial heights as its predecessors. But the sales figures don't matter (it only sold a million copies); Heartbreak Station shows that Cinderella has more genuine rock & roll grit than most of the metal bands of the late '80s. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
The Memphis Horns: Andrew Love (saxophone); Dennis Ruello (baritone saxophone); Wayne Jackson (trumpet).
Additional personnel: Jay Levin (steel guitar); Jay Davidson (saxophone, piano); Ken Hensley (organ); Rod Roddy, Brian O'Neal, Rick Criniti (keyboards); Bashiri Johnson (percussion); Roy McDonald (programming); Elaine Foster, Sharon Foster, Tara Pellerin, Carla Benson, Evette Benton, Curtis King, Brenda King, Tawatha Agee, Eric Troyer (background vocals).
After successful albums that effectively followed contemporary hard rock trends, Cinderella reached back into the Stones and Aerosmith songbooks and created a sneering, raunchy hard rock album that was artistically their finest moment, even if it didn't reach the same commercial heights as its predecessors. But the sales figures don't matter (it only sold a million copies); Heartbreak Station shows that Cinderella has more genuine rock & roll grit than most of the metal bands of the late '80s. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine