One Step Closer (Remaster) The Doobie Brothers

Album info

Album-Release:
1980

HRA-Release:
11.05.2016

Label: Rhino/Warner Bros.

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Southern Rock

Artist: The Doobie Brothers

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Dedicate This Heart (2016 Remastered) 04:10
  • 2 Real Love (2016 Remastered) 04:22
  • 3 No Stoppin' Us Now (2016 Remastered) 04:42
  • 4 Thank You Love (2016 Remastered) 06:23
  • 5 One Step Closer (2016 Remastered) 04:12
  • 6 Keep This Train A-Rollin' (2016 Remastered) 03:32
  • 7 Just In Time (2016 Remastered) 02:45
  • 8 South Bay Strut (Instrumental) (2016 Remastered) 04:04
  • 9 One By One (2016 Remastered) 03:48
  • Total Runtime 37:58

Info for One Step Closer (Remaster)

36 Years Ago: The Doobie Brothers released One Step Closer, their ninth studio album and – as it turned out – the last studio album they’d release before disbanding for more than half a decade.

All things being equal, it’s possible that it was time for the Doobies to call it quits for a while, anyway: by the beginning of 1981, there wasn’t a single founding member of the band left in their lineup, and those who remained were well aware that it was only a matter of time before Michael McDonald kicked off a solo career. (Given that McDonald’s unmistakable voice could already be heard in so many other people’s songs, from Christopher Cross’s “Ride Like the Wind” to Nicolette Larson’s “Let Me Go, Love” to Kenny Loggins’ “This Is It,” it often seemed as if he’d already done so.)

It’s not that One Step Closer didn’t sell well (it hit #3 on the Billboard Top 200 and went platinum) nor that it didn’t feature any hit singles (“Real Love” went to #5, the title track made it into the top-40, and even “Keep This Train A-Rollin’” was a minor hit), but it’s clear that there’d been a major shift in the creative control of the band, and…well, fine, we’ll just go ahead and say it: there’s something not quite right when the rock ‘n’ roll band responsible for “Listen to the Music,” “Long Train Runnin’,” and “Black Water” kicks off an album with a song co-written by Paul Anka.

As drummer Keith Knudson told the L.A. Times in 1987, "There were differences of opinion on which way to go musically. We couldn't make up our minds on a direction. Also, we had nothing new to offer. We could have milked the Doobies for years if we had wanted to. But that would have been unfair to the fans." Indeed, as a gift to those fans, the band proceeded to embark on a farewell tour before finally calling it quits after their performance at the Greek Theater in Berkeley, California on September 11, 1982.

No, One Step Closer isn’t the best of the Brothers’ work, and it’s unlikely that even the band members themselves would claim otherwise, but if you’ve ever been a fan of the music McDonald helped make during his tenure with the Doobies, it’s still worth revisiting.

Patrick Simmons, guitars, vocals
John McFee, guitars, backing vocals
Michael McDonald, keyboards, synthesizers, vocals
Cornelius Bumpus, tenor saxophone, organ, vocals
Tiran Porter, bass
Keith Knudsen, drums, backing vocals
Chester McCracken, drums, vibraphone, marimbas
Additional musicians:
Bobby LaKind, congas, bongos, background vocals
Nicolette Larson, vocals on "Real Love", "Dedicate This Heart", and "Just In Time"
Rev. Patrick Henderson, keyboards on "Real Love", "One By One", and "Keep This Train A-Rollin'"
Lee Thornburg, trumpet on "South Bay Strut" and flugelhorn for "Dedicate This Heart"
Chris Thompson, background vocals on "No Stoppin' Us Now"
Ted Templeman, tambourine, cowbell, maracas
Jerome Jumonville, tenor saxophone
Joel Peskin, baritone saxophone
Bill Armstrong, trumpet
Jimmie Haskell, string arrangements

Recorded 1980 at Sunset Sound Recorders, Hollywood, CA, Warner Brothers Studios, North Hollywood, CA, United Sound Recorders, Detroit, MI and A & R Recorders, New York, NY

Produced by Ted Templeman

Digitally remastered

No biography found.

This album contains no booklet.

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