• logo

Player - Best Of Player (1990) Lossless

Player - Best Of Player (1990) Lossless

BAND/ARTIST: Player

  • Title: Best Of Player
  • Year Of Release: 1990
  • Label: Mercury
  • Genre: Pop Rock, Soft Rock
  • Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 01:08:15
  • Total Size: 437 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Player - Best Of Player (1990) Lossless


Tracklist:

01. Baby Come Back
02. Givin It All
03. I Just Wanna Be With You
04. Let Me Down Easy
05. I’ve Been Thinking
06. Tryin To Write A Hit Song
07. This Time I’m In It For Love
08. It’s For You
09. Bad News Travels Fast
10. Who Do You Think You Are
11. Uoside Down Again
12. Prisoner Of Your Love
13. Wait Until Tomorrow
14. Every Which Way
15. Silver Lining

Player is an American rock band during the late 1970s. Their #1 hit, “Baby Come Back” was written by Peter Beckett and J.C. Crowley. Player first came together in Los Angeles, California. The original members included Peter Beckett (lead vocals, guitar), John Charles “J.C.” Crowley (vocals, keyboards, guitar), Ronn Moss (bass, vocals) and John Friesen (drums). Beckett, a transplanted Englishman, had been in a group called Skyband with Australian Steve Kipner (who’d also played with the popular Aussie act Tin Tin). After Skyband broke up in 1975, Beckett was in LA and met Crowley at a party. He and Crowley teamed up in a new band called Riff Raff, which soon changed its name to Bandana and released a single, “Jukebox Saturday Night”, on Dennis Lambert & Brian Potter’s Haven label. When Haven folded soon after, Lambert & Potter brought the guys over to RSO Records in 1977 and Beckett & Crowley started anew with Moss & Friesen as Player. Wayne Cook, a keyboardist/session player and former member of Steppenwolf, was an additional bandmember for its live performances; he is the curly-haired keyboardist in the band’s videos from the 1970s.
Player gained popularity as a live act during the heyday of the 1970s stadium rock era. They began to develop a distinctive, edgy and melodic rock style. Their biggest hit, “Baby Come Back”, rose to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1978 and was a chart success in other countries. Their follow up single, “This Time I’m In It For Love”, also peaked at No. 10 the same year. Among several notable accolades, Player was named Billboard’s Best New Singles Artist of 1978. Eric Clapton became so impressed with Player that he invited them to open for him during his 1978 North American tour. This further fueled their popularity. At this point, keyboardist Cook left and was replaced by Bob Wooley (formerly of Paul Revere and the Raiders). Eventually, the band began to headline their own events.
Player released three albums during their active touring years: Player (RSO Records), Danger Zone (RSO Records), and Room With A View (Casablanca Records). J.C. Crowley left the band in 1979 prior to recording of the last of these first three albums.
Miles Joseph (vocals, guitar) and Gabriel Katona (keyboards) played on the group’s third album, Room With a View (1980). But Ronn Moss left Player in 1981 to pursue a full-time acting career. (He continues to play the role of Ridge Forrester on the soap opera, The Bold and the Beautiful.) After Moss left, Beckett kept the band going with Friesen, Joseph, Katona and Rusty Buchanan (vocals, bass) and the band released their fourth album, Spies of Life, on RCA in late 1981. The band continued until 1982 and played on the music series Solid Gold that same year with the new lineup.
Peter Beckett was a member of Little River Band from 1989 to 1997 in its latter stages as a club/festival band and played “Baby Come Back” at its performances.
J.C. Crowley (who still occasionally wrote with Beckett) became a Nashville performer and songwriter, recording his only solo album “Beneath The Texas Moon” in 1988. In 1989, he had country hits with “Paint the Town and Hang the Moon Tonight” (No. 13) and “I Know What I’ve Got” (No. 21), and was named “Best New Male Country Performer”. He wrote a number of songs recorded by Nashville artists including Johnny Cash and The Oak Ridge Boys. He also won a battle with cancer in the late 1990s and now lives in Topanga, California.
Although Player officially retired as a touring band, Moss and Beckett have partnered on occasion. The duo recorded an additional studio album as Player, released in Japan in 1995 entitled Electric Shadows, which was renamed Lost In Reality when put out on River North Records in the U.S. in 1996. On December 16, 1997, Player played live for the first time in years at the L.A. Music Awards at the Hollywood Palladium with a lineup consisting of Beckett, Moss, Elliot Easton (of The Cars) on guitar, Burleigh Drummond of Ambrosia on drums and Tony Sciuto of Little River Band on keyboards. A compilation album, Best of Player, was released in 1998.
The response to the group’s reunion show was so enthusiastic that they had several offers for more concert dates. Unfortunately, River North Records dropped the band and Player tried to buy back the rights to the Lost in Reality CD, but were not successful.
Player hit the road in the spring of 1998 with a lineup of Beckett, Moss, Sciuto, Drummond, guitarist Steve Farris (formerly of Mr. Mister) and percussionist Ron Green—with guitarist Dave Amato (from REO Speedwagon) and drummer Ron Wikso (formerly of Foreigner) filling in as needed, depending on the schedules of the others. A 2000 lineup of Player included drummer Craig Pilo, Michael Hakes (guitar), Ron Green, Tony Sciuto, Ronn Moss and Peter playing more shows across the United States. Michael Hakes died on November 19, 2003, from complications of leukemia. After the death of Hakes, the band stopped touring and concentrated on other projects.
In 2007 Player reunited once again with a lineup of: Beckett, Moss, Craig Pilo, Ron Green, Ricky Zacharaides(guitar) and Ed Roth(keyboards).
By 2009 Rob Math (guitar) and Johnny English(keyboards) had come in to replace Zacharaides and Roth.


As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
  • Unlimited high speed downloads
  • Download directly without waiting time
  • Unlimited parallel downloads
  • Support for download accelerators
  • No advertising
  • Resume broken downloads
  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 11:51
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.
  • User offline
  • Kolomito
  •  wrote in 01:22
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks
  • User offline
  • angel44
  •  wrote in 16:44
    • Like
    • 0
Many Thanks