Rough (album) explained

Rough
Type:studio
Artist:Tina Turner
Cover:Tina Turner - Rough.jpg
Border:yes
Released:September 1978
Recorded:1977
Studio:Conway, Hollywood, California
Genre:
Length:41:15
Label:
Producer:Bob Monaco
Prev Title:Acid Queen
Prev Year:1975
Next Title:Love Explosion
Next Year:1979

Rough is the third solo studio album by Tina Turner, released in September 1978 on the EMI label in the UK, Ariola Records in West Germany, and United Artists Records in the United States. This is Turner's first solo album released after her divorce from husband Ike Turner in 1978. Her first two solo albums, Tina Turns the Country On! (1974) and Acid Queen (1975), were released while she was still a member of the Ike & Tina Turner Revue. Although Rough received positive critical reception, it was not a commercial success.

Songs

Rough is made up of mostly blues and disco cover songs with a rock influence. Just like the preceding Acid Queen, the album was an indication that Turner wanted to take her music into a rock-oriented direction.

The opening track, "Fruits of the Night", was co-written by Giorgio Moroder's longtime collaborator Pete Bellotte. Turner recorded a cover of Bob Seger's "Fire Down Below" for the album. It also includes Turner's first cover version of Elton John's "The Bitch Is Back", which she re-recorded in 1991 for the tribute album .

"Viva La Money" was the only single released in the United States.[1] Three additional singles were released in Europe: "Root Toot, Undisputable Rock & Roller", "Sometimes When We Touch", and "Fruits of the Night". None of the singles had chart success.

Critical reception

Billboard reviewed the album as an "adventurous variety of old and new material", adding that Turner's "delivery has lost none of its snap and crackle".[2]

Cash Box wrote that "she rocks rough and randy enough to make her pop and soul competitors quiver in their lizard skin tennis shoes. Turner mixes the intensity of the gospel choir with the promised pleasures of the turned-down bed to great effect."[3]

Record World noted, "Turner's sassy vocals are always something to behold and her newest lp is certainly no exception."[4]

Joel Vance of Stereo Review wrote that "one hearing of 'The Bitch Is Back', 'Night Time Is the Right Time', 'Fire Down Below', or 'Root, Toot Undisputable Rock 'n Roller' will convince you that if Tina temporarily abdicated as the queen of steamy soul, she has now reclaimed her throne with a sweet vengeance."[5]

Reissues

The album was re-issued on CD by EMI in the early 1990s but is currently out of print. In November 2023, the album was made available on streaming services and as a digital download, marking its first release in any digital format.

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. December 2, 1978. Singles To Watch. Cash Box. 17.
  2. October 7, 1978. Top Album Picks: Billboard's Recommended LPs. Billboard. 82.
  3. October 7, 1978. Album Reviews. Billboard. 20.
  4. October 21, 1978. Record World Album Picks. Record World. 20.
  5. March 1979. Popular Discs and Tapes. Stereo Review. 130.