Wildest Wish to Fly explained
The Wildest Wish to Fly |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Rupert Hine |
Cover: | Wildest Wish to Fly.jpg |
Released: | 1983 |
Length: | 48:53 |
Label: | Resurgent |
Producer: | Rupert Hine, Stephen W. Tayler |
Prev Title: | Waving Not Drowning |
Prev Year: | 1982 |
Next Title: | Better Off Dead |
Next Year: | 1985 |
The Wildest Wish to Fly is a solo album by Rupert Hine.[1] It was originally released in 1983 on A&M Records and Island Records and re-released on CD in 2001 on VoicePrint. The album peaked at #31 on the Swedish album chart.[2]
Track listing
All tracks composed by Rupert Hine
- "No Yellow Heart" (Original Version)
- "Living in Sin"
- "The Saturation of the Video Rat"
- "Firefly in the Night"
- "A Golden Age"
- "Picture-phone"
- "Victim of Wanderlust"
- "The Most Dangerous of Men"
- "The Wildest Wish to Fly"
- "Blue Flame (Melt the Ice)" (Bonus CD track)
- "No Yellow Heart" (Later Version) (Bonus CD track)
Personnel
Includes liner notes by Rupert Hine
- Rupert Hine - vocals, various instruments
- Robert Palmer - vocals on "Living in Sin"
- Phil Palmer - guitar
- James West-Oram (member of The Fixx) - guitar
- Stephen W Tayler - woodwinds, recording and mixing
- Michael Dawe - drums
Notes and References
- Web site: ABC's rage to air Rupert Hine tribute episode this weekend. Martin. Josh . 2020-06-18. nme.com. NME. 2022-07-27. Hine's music first appeared in a broadcast episode of Countdown in 1981. During the program, Meldrum played his song solo song Misplaced Love. When Meldrum spoke to Hine in 1983, the producer had released his fifth solo album, The Wildest Wish to Fly..
- Web site: Swedish charts archive. 2011-10-15.