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Quiet Fire (Roberta Flack album)
1971 studio album by Roberta Flack From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Quiet Fire is the third studio album by American singer Roberta Flack, released in November 1971 by Atlantic Records.[1] It was recorded at Atlantic Recording Studios, Regent Studios, and The Hit Factory in New York City.[2] The album peaked at number 18 on the US Billboard Top LPs & Tape, and its single "Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow" charted at number 76 on the Hot 100.[3] At the 15th Annual Grammy Awards, the album secured Roberta Flack a nomination for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female.
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Critical reception
In a contemporary review for The Village Voice, Robert Christgau gave Quiet Fire a C rating, writing that Flack occasionally "sounds kind, intelligent, and very likable, but she often exhibits the gratuitous gentility you'd expect of anyone who said 'between you and I'."[4] In a retrospective review, The Rolling Stone Album Guide (1992) gave it two out of five stars and claimed it "barely sparks at all."[5] AllMusic's Stephen Cook was more enthusiastic, giving it four-and-a-half out of five stars and calling it "one of Flack's best." He believed its "varied mix all comes off sounding seamless." while writing: "Forgoing the full-throttled delivery of, say, Aretha Franklin, Flack translates the pathos of gospel expression into measured intensity and sighing, elongated phrases."[1]
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Track listing
All tracks produced by Joel Dorn.
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Personnel
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Performers and musicians
- Roberta Flack – piano, vocals
- Joshie Armstead – background vocals
- J.R. "Jim" Bailey – background vocals
- Seymour Barab – cello
- David Carey – vibraphone
- Ron Carter – bass guitar
- The Newark Boys Chorus – background vocals
- Joel Dorn – background vocals
- Joe Farrell – flute, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone
- Corky Hale – harp
- Hilda Harris – background vocals
- Cissy Houston – background vocals
- Ted Hoyle – cello
- Wally Kane – bassoon
- Hubert Laws – flute
- Buddy Lucas – harmonica
- Ralph MacDonald – percussion, congas
- Arif Mardin – background vocals, string arrangements, flute arrangement
- Les McCann – background vocals
- Hugh McCracken – guitar
- Gene McDaniels – background vocals
- Kermit Moore – cello
- Romeo Penque – flute, soprano saxophone
- Terry Plumeri – double bass
- Seldon Powell – tenor saxophone
- Bernard Purdie – drums
- Chuck Rainey – bass guitar, electric bass
- George Ricci – cello
- William Slapin – flute
- Grady Tate – percussion, drums
- Richard Tee – organ
- Tasha Thomas – background vocals
- Sammy Turner – background vocals
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References
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