Home Is Where the Heart Is (David Cassidy album)
Appearance
Home Is Where the Heart Is | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | March 1976 | |||
Studio | Caribou Ranch, Nederland, Colorado | |||
Label | RCA | |||
Producer | David Cassidy, Bruce Johnston | |||
David Cassidy chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Home Is Where the Heart Is is the second album released on RCA Records by David Cassidy. It was released in 1976 and was produced by Cassidy and Bruce Johnston. Although critically well received, the album did not chart in any country. The album is noted in particular for Cassidy's recording of Paul McCartney's song "Tomorrow" which McCartney rated as taking the song to its ultimate potential.
The album includes vocals of Carl Wilson, The Hudson Brothers and a composing contribution from Gerry Beckley, who also sings. Some tracks from this album are compiled in the 1996 collection, When I'm a Rock 'n' Roll Star.
Track listing
[edit]- "On Fire" (David Cassidy, Bill House)
- "Damned If This Ain't Love" (David Cassidy)
- "January" (David Paton)
- "A Fool in Love" (Bill House, David Cassidy)
- "Tomorrow" (Paul McCartney, Linda McCartney)
- "Breakin' Down Again" (David Cassidy, Bill House)
- "Run and Hide" (Bill House, David Cassidy)
- "Take This Heart" (David Cassidy, Gerry Beckley)
- "Goodbye Blues" (Ronnie S. Wilkins)
- "Half Past Your Bedtime" (David Cassidy, Gerry Beckley, Ricky Fataar)
Personnel
[edit]- Guitar: David Cassidy, Jesse Ed Davis, Ned Doheny, Bill House, Danny Kortchmar
- Banjo: Harry Robinson
- Bass: Bryan Garofalo, Emory Gordy, Jr., Leland Sklar, Curtis Stone, Willie Weeks
- Keyboards: David Cassidy, Tom Hensley, John Hobbs, Bruce Johnston, Stephen Ross
- Drums: Ricky Fataar, Jim Gordon, Stan House, Jim Keltner, Gary Mallaber, Ron Tutt
- Percussion: David Cassidy, King Errisson, John Raines, Jimmi Seiter
- Saxophone: Steve Douglas
- Harmonica: Henry Diltz
- Backing Vocals: Philip Austin, Dewey Bunnell, Cyrus Faryar, Gloria Grinel, Richie Furay, Kenny Hinkle, Jon Joyce, Trish Turner, Howard Kaylan, Mark Volman
References
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