Make Me Like a Child Again explained

Make Me Like a Child Again
Type:studio
Artist:Wanda Jackson
Cover:Wanda Jackson--Make Me Like a Child Again.jpg
Recorded:Fall 1975
Studio:Creative Workshop
Genre:Gospel[1]
Label:Myrrh
Producer:Billy Ray Hearn
Prev Title:Now I Have Everything
Prev Year:1975
Next Title:I'll Still Love You
Next Year:1976

Make Me Like a Child Again is a studio album by American recording artist Wanda Jackson. It was released in March 1976 via Myrrh Records and contained ten tracks. The disc was Jackson's twenty-fourth studio album and her fourth to consist entirely of gospel songs. One single was issued from the album in 1975 titled "Touring That City".

Background and content

Before her gospel material, Wanda Jackson reached commercial success in the Rockabilly and country music fields with singles like "Let's Have a Party" and "Right Wrong". After dedicating her life to Christianity in 1971, Jackson left her long-time label to record gospel (in combination with country music) for Word Records.[2] [3] Among her gospel releases was Make Me Like a Child Again.[3] The project was recorded in the fall of 1975 at the Creative Workshop, a studio located in Nashville, Tennessee. Sessions were produced by Billy Ray Hearn. A total of ten gospel recordings comprised the album. Among these tracks were covers of "Victory in Jesus", "Lord I'm Coming Home", Marilyn Sellars' "One Day at a Time" and Bill Gaither's "Because He Lives".[1]

Release and singles

Make Me Like a Child Again was released on Myrrh Records in March 1976. It was Jackson's twenty fourth studio collection released in her career and her third Myrrh release. The album was distributed as a vinyl LP, containing five songs on either side of the record.[1] It also was distributed as a cassette.[4] The album failed to reach any Billboard chart positions, notably the Top Country Albums survey, which Jackson's albums often made appearances on.[5] She would record several more gospel and country albums for the Word and Myrrh record labels during the 1970s. However, these albums lacked any commercial success.[2] In her autobiography, Jackson reflected on the album's release and found that the record was "not very memorable" in comparison with her other gospel albums.[3] "Touring That City" was the only single that appeared on the album, released on Myrrh in 1975.[6]

Personnel

All credits are adapted from the liner notes of Make Me Like a Child Again.[1]

Musical personnel

Technical personnel

Release history

RegionDateFormatLabelRef.
March 1976VinylMyrrh Records
Cassette
South AfricaVinyl[7]
VinylMyrrh Records[8]

Notes and References

  1. Jackson . Wanda . Make Me Like a Child Again (LP Liner Notes and Album Information) . . March 1976 . MSA-6556-LP.
  2. Web site: Wolff . Kurt . Wanda Jackson: Biography & History . . 14 July 2021.
  3. Book: Bomar . Scott . Jackson . Wanda . Every night is Saturday night : a country girl's journey to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame . 2017 . BMG . . 9781947026070.
  4. Jackson . Wanda . Make Me Like a Child Again (Cassette Liner Notes and Album Information) . . March 1976 . MSA-6556.
  5. Book: Whitburn . Joel . Joel Whitburn's Top Country Albums: 1967-1997 . 1997 . Record Research Inc. . 0898201241.
  6. Jackson . Wanda . "Touring That City"/"Make Me Like a Child Again" (7" vinyl single) . . 1975 . MS-155.
  7. Jackson . Wanda . Make Me Like a Child Again (LP Liner Notes and Album Information) . . March 1976 . MYR-1043/CR-051.
  8. Jackson . Wanda . Make Me Like a Child Again (LP Liner Notes and Album Information) . . March 1976 . MYR-1043.