Working Nights (album)
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Working Nights | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | May 1985 | |||
Recorded | August 1983 to 1985 | |||
Studio | Powerplant Studios, London | |||
Genre | Soul jazz, latin jazz contemporary jazz | |||
Length | 43:55 | |||
Label | Virgin Records Cherry Red Records | |||
Producer | Robin Millar | |||
Working Week chronology | ||||
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Working Nights is the debut album by the British jazz dance band Working Week, that was released by Virgin Records in 1985.[1] The album reached #23 in the UK album charts in April 1985. Working Nights was reissued in 2012 as a remastered 2-disc Deluxe Set by Cherry Red Records.
Track listing
All tracks composed by Simon Booth and Larry Stabbins, except where noted.
- "Inner City Blues" (Marvin Gaye, James Nyx Jr.) – 5:44
- "Sweet Nothing" (Booth) – 3:39
- "Who’s Fooling Who" – 5:04
- "Thought I’d Never See You Again" – 6:26
- "Autumn Boy" – 6:33
- "Solo" – 4:40
- "Venceremos" (Booth) – 4:41
- "No Cure No Pay" (Stabbins) – 8:28
2012 Cherry Red Records reissue
- Disc 1
- "Inner City Blues" (Gaye, Nyx Jr.) – 5:44
- "Sweet Nothing" (Booth) – 3:39
- "Who’s Fooling Who" – 5:04
- "Thought I’d Never See You Again" – 6:26
- "Autumn Boy" – 6:33
- "Solo" – 4:40
- "Venceremos" (Booth) – 4:41
- "No Cure No Pay" (Stabbins) – 8:28
- "Stella Marina" (Main Mix) (Nuriddin, Stabbins) – 11:04
- "Storm of Light" – 6:40
- "Bottom End" (Booth) – 5:45
- "Venceremos (We Will Win)" (Jazz Dance Special 12" Edit) (Booth) – 4:08
- Disc 2
- "Venceremos (We Will Win)" (Jazz Dance Special 12" Version) (Booth) – 10:17
- "Afrochè" (Stabbins) – 10:17
- "Murphy’s Law" (live previously unissued) (Stabbins) – 7:37
- "Pepe’s Samba" (live previously unissued) (Chico Freeman) – 8:39
- "Inner City Blues" (Urbane Guerrilla Mix) (Gaye, Nyx Jr.) – 5:45
- "Storm of Light" (Instrumental) – 3:24
- "Who’s Fooling Who" (Dance Version) – 4:45
- "Sweet Nothing" (Instrumental) (Booth) – 3:41
- "Where’s the Bridge" (Longer Mix) (Booth, Stabbins, Juliet Roberts) – 5:09
- "Venceremos" (We Will Win) (7" Bossa Version) (Booth) – 4:42
- "Stella Marina" (Full Rap)" (Nuriddin, Stabbins) – 8:35
Personnel
- Working Week
- Juliet Roberts – vocals
- Simon Booth – guitars
- Larry Stabbins – tenor and soprano saxophone and flute
with:
- Kim Burton – piano
- Mike Carr – organ (disc 1, track 10; disc 2, track 6)
- Roy Dodds – drums (disc 1, tracks 2, 5, 6, 8, 9; disc 2, track 11)
- Nic France – drums (disc 1, tracks 1, 3, 4)
- Mark Taylor – drums (disc 1, tracks 1, 12; disc 2, tracks 1, 10)
- Louis Moholo – drums (disc 1, track 9; disc 2, track 11)
- Ernest Mothle – bass (disc 1, tracks 2, 5, 6, 8, 9; disc 2, track 11)
- Chucho Merchán – bass (disc 1, tracks 1, 3, 4, 7, 12; disc 2, tracks 1, 10)
- Dawson Miller and Bosco De Oliveira – percussion (disc 1, tracks 2, 5-9, 12; disc 2, tracks 10, 11)
- Martin Ditcham – percussion (disc 1, tracks 1, 3, 4)
- Robin Millar – additional guitar (disc 1, tracks 1, 3, 5)
- Leroy Osbourne – backing vocals (disc 1, track 2)
- Tracey Thorn – guest vocals (disc 1, track 12; disc 2, tracks 1, 10)
- Robert Wyatt – guest vocals (disc 1, track 12; disc 2, tracks 1, 10)
- Julie Tippetts – guest vocals (disc 1, track 9, 10; disc 2, track 11)
- Jalal – guest vocals (disc 1, track 9; disc 2, track 11)
- Claudia Figueroa – guest vocals (disc 1, track 7, 12; disc 2, tracks 1, 10)
- Guy Barker – trumpet and flugelhorn (disc 1, tracks 1, 3, 4)
- Stuart Brooke – trumpet (disc 1, track 1)
- Harry Beckett – trumpet (disc 1, tracks 2, 5, 11; disc 2, tracks 6, 8)
- Paul Spong – trumpet (disc 1, track 6)
- Annie Whitehead – trombone (disc 1, tracks 2, 6, 8, 9)
- Malcolm Griffiths – trombone (disc 1, track 4)
- Paul Nieman – trombone (disc 1, track 1)
- Chris Biscoe – alto saxophone (disc 1, track 3)
- Ray Warleigh – alto and baritone saxophone (disc 1, tracks 1, 3)
- Dave Bitelli – clarinet and baritone saxophone (disc 1, track 12; disc 2, tracks 1, 10)
- Nick Ingman – string arrangements
Charts
Album charts
Year | Chart | Position |
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1985 | UK album charts[2] | #23 |
References
- ^ Allmusic Review: Working Nights accessed 14 October 2017
- ^ "WORKING WEEK | Artist". Official Charts. Retrieved 2017-10-14.