Randy Vanwarmer - The Complete Bearsville Years (2019)

Artist: Randy Vanwarmer
Title: The Complete Bearsville Years
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Warner Music Group, X5 Music Group
Genre: Pop Rock, Soft Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 02:30:00
Total Size: 364/969 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Complete Bearsville Years
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Warner Music Group, X5 Music Group
Genre: Pop Rock, Soft Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 02:30:00
Total Size: 364/969 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Losing Out On Love 3:08
02. Just When I Needed You Most 4:02
03. Your Light 4:04
04. Gotta Get Out of Here 3:03
05. Convincing Lies 3:32
06. Call Me 4:27
07. Forever Loving You 3:21
08. Deeper and Deeper 3:50
09. I Could Sing 3:18
10. The One Who Loves You 4:33
11. Whatever You Decide 5:12
12. I Discovered Love 2:30
13. All We Have Is Tonight 3:32
14. I'm Gonna Prove It 3:55
15. Doesn't Matter Anymore 3:19
16. Down Like a Rock 3:39
17. Falling Tree / I've Got a Ticket / 21St Century / Terraform 10:29
18. Farther Along 3:58
19. Suzi Found a Weapon 3:10
20. Always Night 3:54
21. Babel/ Don't Hide 7:09
22. Amen 1:48
23. I Guess It Never Hurts to Hurt Sometimes 3:57
24. Frightened By the Light of Day 3:28
25. Hanging On to Heaven 3:19
26. The Beat of Love 4:34
27. When I'm Dead and Gone 3:28
28. Don't Wake Me Up 2:52
29. The Things That You Dream 3:31
30. At Least It's a Life 3:37
31. What In the World Comes Over You at Night 4:52
32. Gonna Build Me a Rocket 4:00
33. Do You Believe In Magic 2:37
34. Only What You Steal 4:21
35. Color Me Out 4:02
36. Shadows of the Night 3:16
37. I'm Still In Love 3:14
38. Hester's Song 5:00
Best remembered for his 1979 pop smash, "Just When I Needed You Most," singer/songwriter Randy VanWarmer was born March 30, 1955, in Indian Hills, CO. After his father was killed in a 1967 auto accident, VanWarmer and his mother relocated to Cornwall, England; he began writing and performing while in his teens, and upon returning stateside in 1978 settled in Woodstock, NY, soon signing to the local Bearsville label. His debut LP, Warmer, followed in 1979 -- written when VanWarmer was just 18, the single "Just When I Needed You Most" proved the rare pop ballad that could crack disco-dominated radio play lists as the decade drew to a close, reaching the number four spot on the Billboard chart.
His sophomore effort, Terraform, appeared in 1980, trailed a year later by Beat of Love -- neither record was a pop hit, but VanWarmer was gaining increasing industry fame as a composer, especially after his "I'm in a Hurry (And Don't Know Why)" topped the country charts for Alabama in 1982. A fourth solo LP, The Things That You Dream, was issued to diminishing commercial returns in 1983, and a year later the Oak Ridge Boys hit number one with his "I Guess It Never Hurts to Hurt Sometimes." VanWarmer relocated to Nashville in 1985 to ply his trade as a country songwriter -- in 1988, he resurfaced as a solo artist with I Am, scoring a pair of country hits with "I Will Hold You" and "Where the Rocky Mountains Touch the Morning Sun." Subsequent efforts include 1990's Every Now and Then, 1994's The Vital Spark, and 1995's Third Child. After a long battle with leukemia, VanWarmer died in Seattle on January 12, 2004. ~ Jason Ankeny
His sophomore effort, Terraform, appeared in 1980, trailed a year later by Beat of Love -- neither record was a pop hit, but VanWarmer was gaining increasing industry fame as a composer, especially after his "I'm in a Hurry (And Don't Know Why)" topped the country charts for Alabama in 1982. A fourth solo LP, The Things That You Dream, was issued to diminishing commercial returns in 1983, and a year later the Oak Ridge Boys hit number one with his "I Guess It Never Hurts to Hurt Sometimes." VanWarmer relocated to Nashville in 1985 to ply his trade as a country songwriter -- in 1988, he resurfaced as a solo artist with I Am, scoring a pair of country hits with "I Will Hold You" and "Where the Rocky Mountains Touch the Morning Sun." Subsequent efforts include 1990's Every Now and Then, 1994's The Vital Spark, and 1995's Third Child. After a long battle with leukemia, VanWarmer died in Seattle on January 12, 2004. ~ Jason Ankeny