1977 studio album by Papa John Creach
Cat & the Fiddle Released 1977 Recorded March 1977 at Quantam Recording Studios, Torrance, California , Woodland Sound, Nashville, Tennessee , and Toronto Sound , Toronto, Ontario , Canada Genre Label Amherst/DJM Producer Jack Richardson , Keith Gravenhorst
The Cat and the Fiddle is an album by the American musician Papa John Creach , his first with DJM Records .[3] Bryan Tilford and Mark Leon who performed in the band Midnight Sun on Rock Father return for this album, but Kevin Moore otherwise known as Keb' Mo' moved on and was replaced on this album with Joey Brasler. It was produced primarily by Jack Richardson .[4]
Track listing [ edit ] Side One [ edit ] "Country Boy, City Man" (Brian Tilford) – 3:19 "Keep on Rockin'" (Brian Cadd) – 3:43 "Livin' for Myself" (Donnell Jones) – 3:45 "Keep on Movin'" (Tom Seufert, Gregg Sutton) – 3:34 "Right Down" (Don Grady) – 3:40 Side Two [ edit ] "Let's Get Dancin'" (Tilford) – 4:29 "Foxy Lady" (Steve Haberman) – 3:49 "Rock & Roll Music" (Tilford) – 4:00 "Give Me Another Chance" (Joey Brasler, Roy Sciacca) – 3:15 "Pop Stop" (Haberman) – 5:00 Personnel [ edit ] Steve Haberman – keyboards Bryan Tilford – bass, background vocals Mark Leon – drums, background vocals Joey Brasler – guitar Reid King – background vocals Papa John Creach – lead vocals, fiddle Additional Personnel [ edit ] Doug Riley - strings and horns arrangement Tracy Richardson – background vocals Rachel Oldfield – background vocals Al Stahaley – lead vocals on "Keep on Rockin'" and "Rock & Roll Music" Roy Sciacca – lead vocals on "Give Me Another Chance" Scott Cushnie – solo keyboard on "Give Me Another Chance" Bob Zimmitti – percussion Production [ edit ] Jack Richardson – producer Keith Gravenhorst – producer, recording engineer Rich Lowler, Dave McKinley, Steve Vaughan – recording technicians Toronto Sound – tape mastering Cub Richardson – disc mastering engineer DFK / David Krieger – art direction Jim McCrary – photography References [ edit ] ^ "The Cat & the Fiddle Papa John Creach" . AllMusic . Retrieved 14 March 2024 . ^ Larkin, Colin (2013). The Virgin Encyclopedia of the Blues . Virgin. ^ The New Rolling Stone Record Guide . Random House. 1983. p. 121. ^ Morse, Steve (Sep 13, 1977). "Papa John jumping at 60". The Boston Globe . p. 19.
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