Road Runner (Junior Walker album)
Road Runner | ||||
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File:Road Runner.jpg | ||||
Studio album by Junior Walker & the All-Stars | ||||
Released | 1966 | |||
Genre | R&B | |||
Label | Soul Records (US) Tamla/Motown (international) |
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Producer | Johnny Bristol, Henry Cosby, Lamont Dozier, Harvey Fuqua, Berry Gordy, Jr., Brian Holland, Lawrence Horn, Mickey Stevenson | |||
Junior Walker & the All-Stars chronology | ||||
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Road Runner is a 1966 R&B album by Junior Walker & the All-Stars.[1] The band's second album, it reached #6 on Billboard's "Top R&B Albums" chart and #64 on Billboard's "Top Albums" chart, launching four hit singles.[2][3] First released on record by Motown's Soul label in the US and Tamla/Motown internationally, it has been multiply reissued on cassette and compact disc. It has also been remastered and reissued in conjunction with the band's preceding record, Home Cookin', as Road Runner & Home Cookin'.
Songs
Among the album's notable songs were four charting singles. Peak among them at #3 on the R&B Singles, #18 on the Pop Singles charts and #22 on the UK Singles was the Holland–Dozier–Holland song "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)",[3][4] which had previously hit for Marvin Gaye in 1964. Not far behind, "(I'm a) Road Runner", by the same songwriters, reached #4 on Black Singles and #20 on Pop Singles, while surpassing "How Sweet It Is" to reach #12 in the UK. "Pucker Up Buttercup" did not crack the top 10, but reached #11 Black Singles and #31 Pop Singles. A distant fourth, Junior Walker & the Allstar's cover of the 1959 Barrett Strong hit "Money (That's What I Want)" reached #35 Black Singles and #52 Pop Singles.
The album is titled for "(I'm a) Road Runner", which had been previously released on Junior Walker & The All-Star's 1965 debut album, Shotgun. It proved so successful in its March 1966 single that it was included and singled out on the band's follow-up.[5] Although "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)" surpassed it in two out of three charts, "(I'm a) Road Runner" is regarded as a superior offering from Junior Walker & The All-Stars, one of three songs by the band (along with "Way Back Home" and "Shotgun" included in 1999's Da Capo Press publication The heart of rock & soul: the 1001 greatest singles ever made.[6] Ranking it second of the three at #467, music critic David Marsh, identifying Junior Walker as "the one gutbucket star in Motown's heaven", says "even...[Robert Johnson] never saw the like of this blend of booming bass, tanked-up tambourine, and gritty guitar. Much less Walker's fractured saxophone."[7] Sometimes known as "I'm a Road Runner", the song has been covered by a number of rock bands, including Fleetwood Mac (on album Penguin) and Peter Frampton (on I'm in You), and also by comedian Bill Cosby on Bill Cosby Sings Hooray For the Salvation Army Band![5]
Track listing
- "(I'm a) Road Runner" (Dozier, Holland, Holland) – 2:49
- "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)" (Lamont Dozier, Brian Holland, Edward Holland, Jr.) – 3:04
- "Pucker Up Buttercup" (John Bristol, Danny Coggins, Fuqua) – 3:18
- "Money (That's What I Want)" (Janie Bradford, Berry Gordy) – 4:34
- "Last Call" (Frank Bryant, Autry DeWalt II, Lawrence Horn) – 2:23
- "Anyway You Wannta" (Harvey Fuqua, Gwen Gordy) – 2:41
- "Baby You Know You Ain't Right" (Autry DeWalt II, Lawrence Horn) – 2:34
- "Amé Cherie (Soul Darling)" (James Graves, Horn, Victor Thomas, Willie Woods) – 4:13
- "Twist Lackawanna" (DeWalt, Ronald White) – 2:19
- "San-Ho-Zay" (Freddie King, Sonny Thompson) – 3:00
- "Mutiny" (Henry Cosby) – 3:55
Personnel
Performance
- James Graves – drums
- Vic Thomas – keyboards
- Junior Walker – saxophone, vocals
- Willie Woods – guitar
- James Jamerson - bass
Production
- Maggie Agard – package concept
- Jennifer Beal – master tape research
- Johnny Bristol – producer
- Henry Cosby – producer
- Lamont Dozier – producer
- Ellen Fitton – remastering
- Harvey Fuqua – producer
- Berry Gordy, Jr. – producer
- Suha Gur – mixing
- Brian Holland – producer
- Lawrence Horn – producer
- Joan Pace – master tape research
- Andrew Skurow – research, annotation
- Mickey Stevenson – producer
- Harry Weinger – project coordinator, A&R
- Ben Young – package design
References
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- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ Marsh, 310.
- Pages with broken file links
- Music infoboxes with Module:String errors
- Music infoboxes with deprecated parameters
- Junior Walker albums
- 1966 albums
- Albums produced by Johnny Bristol
- Albums produced by Henry Cosby
- Albums produced by Lamont Dozier
- Albums produced by Berry Gordy
- Albums produced by Brian Holland
- Albums produced by William "Mickey" Stevenson
- Albums produced by Harvey Fuqua
- Tamla Records albums
- English-language albums