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This Year's Model (Imperials album)

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This Year's Model
Studio album by
Released1987
Recorded1986
Studio
Genre
Length43:51
LabelMyrrh/Word
ProducerBrown Bannister
The Imperials chronology
Let the Wind Blow
(1985)
This Year's Model
(1987)
Free the Fire
(1988)

This Year's Model is the 32nd studio album by Christian music vocal group The Imperials, released in 1987 on Myrrh Records.[1] This is the first album to feature new members Jimmie Lee Sloas and Ron Hemby, replacing long-time tenor Jim Murray and lead singer Paul Smith. It was a change in direction as This Year's Model's sound was more rock-oriented alienating long-time fans of the Imperials' four-part harmony of their early years. The track "Power of God" became a theme song for Christian bodybuilders the Power Team and new younger fans began to come to Imperials concerts. Production duties were done by Brown Bannister, who produced their previous album Let the Wind Blow (1985) with songwriting contributions from fellow CCM acts Pam Mark Hall, Chris Eaton and Paul Smith who co-wrote the lead single "Wings of Love". This Year's Model peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Top Inspirational Albums chart.

Track listing

[edit]
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Holding On (First Love)"Pam Mark Hall, Keith Thomas5:22
2."Fallin'"Jimmie Lee Sloas4:03
3."Warriors"Chris Eaton4:54
4."How Do I Get You?"Mark Gendel, Bob Johnson5:38
5."Wings of Love"K. Thomas, Paul Smith4:38
6."Power of God"Ron Hemby, Tom Hemby4:07
7."Outlander"C. Eaton6:47
8."Get Ready"J. Lee Sloas4:38
9."Devoted to You"R. Hemby, Stephen Bashaw3:44

Personnel

[edit]

The Imperials

  • Jimmie Lee Sloas – tenor, co-lead vocals
  • Ron Hemby – tenor, co-lead vocals
  • David Will – baritone, vocals
  • Armond Morales – bass, vocals

Musicians

  • Peter Kaye – Fairlight programming
  • Steve Schaffer – Synclavier programming
  • Keith Thomas – keyboards (1, 2, 5, 8, 9), drum programming (1, 2, 5), rhythm track arrangements (1, 2, 5), additional keyboards (6)
  • Shane Keister – Fairlight programming, additional keyboards (1), additional bass (1), keyboards (4, 7, 8), drums (4), drum programming (7), rhythm track arrangements (7)
  • Carl Marsh – Fairlight programming, Fairlight III (1, 3)
  • Chris Eaton – keyboards (3), drum programming (3)
  • Rhett Lawrence – Fairlight programming, keyboards (6), drum programming (6), rhythm track arrangements (6)
  • Robbie Buchanan – acoustic piano (9)
  • Dann Huff – rhythm guitar (2), guitars (5)
  • Mark Grendel – guitar solo (2), guitars (3, 4), rhythm track arrangements (4)
  • Tom Hemby – guitars (6, 8, 9)
  • Jimmie Lee Sloas – bass (2, 8), rhythm track arrangements (2, 4)
  • Gary Lunn – fretless bass (4), bass (9)
  • Paul Leim – drum overdubs (2), drums (8, 9)
  • Lenny Castro – percussion (8)
  • Mark Douthit – saxophone (3, 8)
  • Barry Green – trombone (8)
  • Mike Haynes – trumpet (8)
  • Robert White Johnson – rhythm track arrangements (4)
  • Pam Mark Hall – additional backing vocals (1)

Production

  • Lynn Nichols – executive producer, jacket concept
  • Brown Bannister – producer
  • Steve MacMillan – rhythm track recording (1, 2, 4-9)
  • Jeff Balding – overdub recording, rhythm track recording (3)
  • James "JB" Baird – overdub recording
  • Joe Schiff – rhythm track recording assistant (1, 2, 4-9)
  • Billy Whittington – rhythm track recording assistant (3), second engineer
  • Spencer Chrislu – second engineer
  • Danny Johnston – second engineer
  • Wade Jaynes – second engineer
  • J.T. – second engineer
  • Nick Froome – mixing
  • Ed Goodreau – mix assistant
  • Rob Jaczko – mix assistant
  • Doug Sax – mastering at The Mastering Lab (Hollywood, California)
  • Joan Tankersley – art direction, jacket concept
  • Patrick Pollei – design
  • Aaron Rapoport – front cover photography
  • Ellen Schuster – back cover photography

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]

Evan Cater of AllMusic praised This Year's Model saying that "the four male vocalists donned leather jackets, laced their hair with styling gel, backed their act with all the musical technology available in the '80s, wrapped it up in shimmering space-themed art direction, and generally sent the message to church youth groups nationwide that this was not their fathers' Imperials. The ultra-sleek pop production, replete with sweeping synthesizers, gritty bass runs, and rockin' electric guitar solos, was courtesy of Brown Bannister, who brought the same big, electronic sound to other '80s CCM records like Michael W. Smith's 'The Big Picture', Amy Grant's 'Unguarded', and Charlie Peacock's 'Secret of Time.' As it turned out, 'This Year's Model' was aptly titled. The album was probably destined to be a period piece, but some of the songs, like the opening 'Holding On (First Love)' and the breakdanceable 'Fallin',' hold up surprisingly well over the years."

Charts

[edit]
Chart (1987) Peak
position
US Top Inspirational Albums (Billboard)[3] 3

Year-end charts

[edit]
Chart (1987) Position
US Inspirational Albums (Billboard)[4] 8

Radio singles

[edit]
Year Singles Peak positions
CCM AC[5] CCM CHR[6]
1987 "Wings of Love" 1 2
1987 "Get Ready" 4 10
1987 "How Do I Get You?" 14
1987 "Holding On (First Love)" 23 3
1987 "Fallin'" 6
1987 "Devoted to You" 7

References

[edit]
  1. ^ The Imperials: This Year's Model. Myrrh Records. 1987.
  2. ^ The Imperials – This Year's Model: Review at AllMusic
  3. ^ "Inspirational LPs" (PDF). Billboard. May 2, 1987. p. 61.
  4. ^ "Inspirational LPs Year-end issue" (PDF). Billboard. December 26, 1987. p. Y-33.
  5. ^ Brothers, Jeffrey Lee, ed. (2003). CCM Hot Hits: AC Charts 1978 - 2001. AuthorHouse. p. 121. ISBN 1-4107-3294-0.
  6. ^ Brothers, Jeffrey Lee, ed. (1999). CCM Hot Hits: Christian Hit Radio - 20 Years of Charts, Artist Bios and More. CCM Books. p. 97. ISBN 0-8230-7718-7.