Twiggy (album) (original) (raw)
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1976 studio album by Twiggy
Twiggy | |
---|---|
Studio album by Twiggy | |
Released | July 1976 |
Recorded | 1976, Phonogram Studios London |
Genre | country, pop |
Label | Mercury |
Producer | Tony Eyers |
Twiggy chronology | |
Twiggy(1976) Please Get My Name Right(1977) | |
Singles from Twiggy | |
"Here I Go Again" | |
Twiggy is the self-titled debut album from British model and singer Twiggy. It was released in 1976 in England and mainland Europe.[1] The album featured the top-20 single "Here I Go Again". The album peaked at number 33 on the UK albums chart, receiving a silver certification.
After four years of modelling, Twiggy retired in 1970, and embarked on an acting and singing career. Twiggy spoke of her debut album, "My first real album after my record deal with Phonogram - I'd always absolutely adored country music, I guess it was always my 'thing'. This album was slightly more country than 'Please Get My Name Right', which was more pop I suppose. The first album did rather well, earning me a silver disc, although they both did very well. This album was produced by Tony Eyers, who was a hot record producer at the time.".[2]
The album included the UK top-20 hit, "Here I Go Again", which peaked at number 17.
The album was warmly received by Rolling Stone, with reviewer Billy Altman opining, "Her voice, which at alternate times recalls Olivia Newton-John and Melanie (but without the former's calculated submissiveness or the latter's hyperextended vulnerability) is strong and self-assured". Also commenting, "she has a fine sense of where the heart of a song lies (...) There is a delicateness and vitality in Twiggy's music that is well above the usual MOR fare and one wishes her good luck in a field that is, if anything, more volatile and fickle than the modeling and fashion world".[3]
Chart (1976) | Peakposition |
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UK Albums Chart | 33 |
- Twiggy: Vocal
- Gerry Butler: Arrangement
- Steve Brown: Engineer
- ^ "Twiggy". AllMusic. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
- ^ "Twiggy - Recordings". Twiggy Lawson Official Site. 2001–2012. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
- ^ "20 Rock Albums Rolling Stone Loved in the 1970s That You Never Heard". Rolling Stone.
- ^ "British album certifications – Twiggy – Twiggy". British Phonographic Industry.