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The Tale of the Tape
1980 studio album by Billy Squier From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Tale of the Tape is the debut studio album by American rock musician Billy Squier.[1] It was his first solo album, following two albums with the band Piper. Despite not being a huge success, the disc spent three months on Billboard's album chart and helped to kickstart Squier's solo career.
Although no songs from the album reached the charts, the song "The Big Beat" has been notably sampled by hip hop artists, including Run-D.M.C.'s "Here We Go", Big Daddy Kane's "Ain't No Half Steppin'", Jay-Z's "99 Problems", Dizzee Rascal's "Fix Up, Look Sharp", U.T.F.O's "Roxanne, Roxanne" and Alicia Keys' "Girl on Fire". The song also featured a pre-MTV music video.
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Critical reception
In a May 10, 1980, Billboard review, the writer expressed a hope that Billy Squier would be able to realize his potential with this album, which he did not fulfill with Piper. It quantified that it "fits nicely in a set with Journey and Styx."[2]
Track listing
All tracks are written by Billy Squier, except where noted.
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Personnel
- Billy Squier - Vocals, Guitar, Percussion
- Bruce Kulick - Guitar
- David Sancious - Keyboards, Synthesizers
- Richard T. Bear - Keyboards
- Bucky Ballard - Bass
- Bobby Chouinard - Drums
- Ernest Carter - Percussion
- Woodstock Children's Chorus - Ellen Todd, Conductor
Production
- Produced by Billy Squier & Eddy Offord
- Engineered and mixed by Eddy Offord & Rob Davis
- Mastered by Wally Traugott
- All songs published by Songs Of The Knight (BMI), except "Who's Your Boyfriend" (Songs Of The Knight/Bomass Music Corp.), "Who Knows What A Love Can Do" (Songs Of The Knight/Hostel Music), and "You Should Be High, Love" (Songs Of The Knight/Desmobile Music Company).
Charts
References
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