Night Rains Explained

Night Rains
Type:Studio
Artist:Janis Ian
Cover:Janis Ian - Night Rains.png
Released:September 1979
Recorded:1978
Studio:A & R Studios, New York City
CBS Recording Studios, New York City
Musicland, Munich, West Germany
Rusk Sound, Los Angeles, California
The Hit Factory, New York City
Label:Columbia
Producer:Janis Ian, Ron Fragipane
Giorgio Moroder
Prev Title:Janis Ian
Prev Year:1978
Next Title:Restless Eyes
Next Year:1981

Night Rains is the eleventh studio album by American singer-songwriter Janis Ian, released in 1979 on Columbia Records.

The commercial failure of her previous self-titled album and its accompanying singles led Columbia to demand Ian make a major change of direction for Night Rains to restore her commercial fortunes.[1] [2] She initially focused on writing film music for Foxes and The Bell Jar,[3] and then adopted a fully commercial pop sound, collaborating with Albert Hammond of "It Never Rains in Southern California" fame on one song, and with superstar disco producer Giorgio Moroder on two tracks including the Foxes theme. E Street Band saxophonist Clarence Clemons played on two songs and jazz pianist Chick Corea on "Jenny (Iowa Sunrise)".

Consequent upon its release alongside twenty-four other Columbia Records albums in the fall of 1979,[4] Night Rains was effectively un-promoted by the label in the United States and became Ian's first to not dent the Billboard albums chart since Present Company. Even a re-release a year later with much greater record company promotion failed to get Night Rains onto the chart.[3]

Although first single "Here Comes the Night" (Theme from The Bell Jar) did not chart anywhere, second single "Fly Too High" became a top ten hit in the Netherlands, Australia and New Zealand, and drove Night Rains into the top twenty in those markets. "Fly Too High" and third single "The Other Side of the Sun" also became Ian's first-ever chart entries in the United Kingdom, although Night Rains did not crack the top 75 albums.

Subsequent to Ian's 1990s comeback, "Fly Too High" and "Jenny (Iowa Sunrise)" have remained part of her live setlist, and both those songs have appeared on career-spanning compilations.

Critical reception

The Omaha World-Herald wrote that Ian's "tender, painful, usually affectedly serious lyrics too often end up a bit corny."

Charts

Chart (1979/1980)Peakposition
Australia (Kent Music Report)[5] 11
New Zealand[6] 11
Netherlands (Dutch Charts)[7] 2

Notes and References

  1. News: Hunt. Dennis. 1980-09-01. Janis Ian Gave 'Em What They Wanted and So What Now?. 10-A. The Philadelphia Inquirer.
  2. News: Hunt. Dennis. 1980-10-11. Believe It or Not, Janis Ian Has Changed. 22. The Journal-Herald. Dayton, Ohio.
  3. News: Garner. Jack. 1980-07-27. Learning To Live with Peaks and Troughs. 1C. Democrat and Chronicle. Rochester, New York.
  4. News: Beck. Marilyn. 1980-08-08. Producers Dig In for Long Actors' Strike. A-6. Green Bay Press-Gazette.
  5. Book: Kent, David. Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. Australian Chart Book. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. illustrated. St Ives, N.S.W.. 145. David Kent (historian).
  6. Web site: Janis Ian — Night Rains. 2021-10-08. charts.nz.
  7. van Slooten, Johan; Albumdossier 1969-2002 GottmerBecht, 2002.