Lipstick Powder and Paint | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Shakin' Stevens |
Cover: | File:Shakin' Stevens Lipstick, Powder and Paint album.jpg |
Released: | 4 November 1985 |
Recorded: | 1985 |
Studio: |
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Genre: | Rock and roll |
Length: | 34:30 |
Label: | Epic |
Producer: |
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Prev Title: | The Bop Won't Stop |
Prev Year: | 1983 |
Next Title: | Let's Boogie |
Next Year: | 1987 |
Lipstick Powder and Paint is an album by Welsh rock and roll singer Shakin' Stevens, released in November 1985 by Epic Records. It peaked at number 37 on the UK Albums Chart.
Only two singles were released from the album: the title track, a cover of Big Joe Turner's "Lipstick, Powder and Paint", and a cover of the Tim Krekel song "Turning Away" (also covered by Crystal Gayle). Neither of these reached the Top-Ten in the UK, making it Stevens' first album since Take One! (1980) not to have a Top-Ten single. Despite this, in between the release of the two singles, Stevens released "Merry Christmas Everyone", which topped the charts.
Unlike with his previous album, The Bop Won't Stop, Epic decided not to release the album on CD, so it was not until the 2009 Epic Masters box set that the album was officially released on CD. The box set has several bonus tracks, including two singles, "Teardrops" and "Breaking Up My Heart", that had been released from Stevens' Greatest Hits album.
On both the original release and the box set, "Don't Lie to Me" is credited to Chuck Berry. However, the song, actually called "Don't You Lie to Me", was written and originally sung by Hudson Whittaker (under the name Tampa Red).
Reviewing for Number One, Karen Swayne wrote that the album "has the current hit, plus variations on the sanitised rock 'n' rolling theme. The lyrical concerns are good loving, bad loving and good loving gone bad, and Shaky puts about the same lack of emotion into each track." Swayne also wrote that Stevens' "legions of fans will buy this anyway, and defend him loyally to any non-believers."
Sally Gethin for Smash Hits was more positive about the album, giving it a six out of ten, and writing that Stevens' "may not be creaming off the catchiest numbers any more... but a new Shaky album is as warm and reliable as sinking into your favourite bubbly bath. Predictable melodies are crooned to perfection, upbeat party numbers dunked in that familiar Elvis Presley coating."
2009 bonus tracks:
Musicians
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