The Hits (April Wine album)

The Hits is a Compilation album by the Canadian rock band April Wine, released in 1987. The picture used on this cover is also used on the album covers of First Glance (1978) (American version only), Greatest Hits (1979), and Classic Masters (2002).

The Hits
Greatest hits album by
Released1987 (1987)
GenreRock
Length70:20
LabelAquarius, Capitol
ProducerSee various producers
April Wine chronology
All the Rockers
(1987)
The Hits
(1987)
We Like to Rock
(1988)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Track listing

All tracks written by Myles Goodwyn unless otherwise noted.

  1. "Say Hello" 2:59
  2. "Enough is Enough" 4:03
  3. "Just Between You and Me" 3:55
  4. "Roller" 3:36
  5. "Love Has Remembered Me" 4:08
  6. "This Could Be the Right One" 4:08
  7. "Sign of the Gypsy Queen" (Lorence Hud) 4:15
  8. "What If We Fall in Love" 4:18
  9. "Rock Myself to Sleep" (Kimberley Rew, Vince de la Cruz) 2:57
  10. "Doin' It Right" (Tom Lavin) 3:38
  11. "Tell Me Why" (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) 3:15
  12. "Tonite is a Wonderful Time to Fall in Love" 3:37
  13. "I'm on Fire for You Baby" (David Elliott) (1974 single) 3:27
  14. "You Could Have Been a Lady" (Errol Brown, Tony Wilson) 3:21
  15. "Rock n' Roll Is a Vicious Game" 3:16
  16. "Like a Lover, Like a Song" 5:07
  17. "You Won't Dance with Me" 3:43
  18. "Fast Train" 3:21
  19. "I Wouldn't Want to Lose Your Love" 3:09

Personnel

  • Myles Goodwyn lead & background vocals, guitar, keyboards
  • Brian Greenway guitar, vocals, harmonica
  • Gary Moffet guitar, vocals
  • David Henman guitar, vocals
  • Steve Lang bass, background vocals
  • Jean Pellerin bass (on tracks 5 and 9)
  • Jim Clench bass, vocals
  • Jim Henman bass, vocals, acoustic guitar
  • Jerry Mercer drums & percussion, background vocals
  • Marty Simon drums (on tracks 5 and 9)
  • Ritchie Henman percussion, keyboards
  • Daniel Barbe keyboards (on tracks 5 and 9)

Various producers

References

  1. "April Wine The Hits review". AllMusic. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.