Nobody's Angel (Crystal Gayle album)

Nobody's Angel is an album by the American country music singer Crystal Gayle. Released in September 1988, the album peaked at number 63 on the Billboard Country Albums Chart.

Nobody's Angel
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 1988
StudioOcean Way Recording, (Hollywood, California); Sixteenth Avenue Sound, Audio Media Recording and MasterMix (Nashville, Tennessee).
GenreCountry
Length33:59
LabelWarner Bros. Nashville
ProducerJim Ed Norman
Eric Prestidge
Crystal Gayle chronology
The Best of Crystal Gayle
(1987)
Nobody's Angel
(1988)
Ain't Gonna Worry
(1990)
Singles from Nobody's Angel
  1. "Nobody's Angel"
    Released: August 27, 1988
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

The title track, "Nobody's Angel", peaked at number 22 on the Billboard Country Singles chart, and was Gayle's final Top 40 hit on that chart.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Nobody's Angel"Karen Brooks, Randy Sharp3:06
2."Prove Me Wrong"Vince Gill, Don Schlitz2:59
3."Old Habits Die Hard"Graham Lyle, Terry Britten3:37
4."Tennessee Nights"Shawna Harrington-Buckhart, Jan Buckingham3:28
5."When Love Is New"Beth Nielsen Chapman3:11
6."Hopeless Romantic"Billy Vera4:04
7."Love May Find You"Wendy Waldman, Eric Kaz3:17
8."Love Found Me" (with Dennis Locorriere)Troy Seals, Eddie Setser, Dennis Locorriere3:45
9."Heat"Tom Campbell, Hugh Prestwood3:23
10."After the Best"Thom McHugh, Bernie Nelson3:09

Personnel

Production

  • Jim Ed Norman – producer
  • Eric Prestidge – producer, engineer, mixing
  • Joel Bouchillon – assistant engineer
  • Lee Groitzsch – assistant engineer
  • Daniel Johnston – assistant engineer, additional assistant engineer, mix assistant
  • Bob Loftus – assistant engineer
  • John David Parker – assistant engineer
  • Kurt Storey – additional assistant engineer
  • Jeff Giedt – mix assistant
  • Ken Love – mastering at MasterMix (Nashville, Tennessee)
  • Virginia Team – art direction
  • Jerry Joyner – design
  • Empire Studio – photography

Chart performance

Chart (1988) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums 63

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.