Status Quo - If You Can't Stand The Heat (Deluxe Editions) (2016)
Artist: Status Quo
Title: If You Can't Stand The Heat
Year Of Release: 1978
Label: Mercury Records Ltd. – 4766959
Genre: Pop Rock, Classic Rock
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 01:14:43
Total Size: 699/398 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: If You Can't Stand The Heat
Year Of Release: 1978
Label: Mercury Records Ltd. – 4766959
Genre: Pop Rock, Classic Rock
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 01:14:43
Total Size: 699/398 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
CD -1
01 Again And Again
02 I'm Giving Up My Worryin'
03 Gonna Teach You To Love Me
04 Someone Show Me Home
05 Long Legged Linda
06 Oh! What A Night
07 Accident Prone
08 Stones
09 Let Me Fly
10 Like A Good Girl
CD -2
01 Accident Prone (Single Edit)
02 One By One (Early Demo)
03 One By One (Demo)
04 No Time Left To Cry (Early Demo)
05 No Time Left To Cry (Demo)
06 Keep Me Guessing (Early Demo)
07 Keep Me Guessing (Demo)
08 Late Last Night (Demo)
09 Late Last Night (Early Demo)
10 Invitation (Demo)
11 Invitation (Early Demo)
12 Again And Again (Demo)
After the turn toward a more accessible sound that Rockin' All Over the World supposed, the British band returned to its hard rock approach on its next work. If You Can't Stand the Heat isn't so hard and heavy as Quo or Blue for You, but it incorporates subjects -- the electric guitars filling everywhere again, the groovy boogie spirit -- that recover the rocking essence they seem to have lost only one year before. One of the best examples is the infectious "Again and Again," the first single from the record, but also the sweaty "Gonna Teach You to Love Me" and the danceable "Long Legged Linda," borrowed from keyboardist Andy Bown's previous solo album. Status Quo keeps on worrying here about a clean production that enriches the different textures within the songs. The job is endorsed to Pip Williams for the second time, after the successful results in Rockin' All Over the World. Parallel to the groovy approach, the band also tries to experiment with its sound, without giving its roots up. Surprises are specially relevant in "Accident Prone" -- filled with disco synths, and one of the most singular and effective songs in the record -- or in the gospel choirs found in "Oh! What a Night!" Accurate and precise performances in the rest of the album, in which also stand out the catchy "Stones" and "Let Me Fly" and the gorgeous ballad "Someone Show Me Home," made of the 12th record by Status Quo one of their most unfairly underrated efforts from their discography from the second half of the '70s.