Bump in the Night
Studio album by
ReleasedJanuary 1981
Recorded1980
GenreRock & roll, roots rock, hard rock
Length33:31
LabelMercury
ProducerRob Fraboni
Ian McLagan chronology
Troublemaker
(1979)
Bump in the Night
(1981)
Last Chance to Dance
(1985)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Bump in the Night is an album by former Small Faces and Faces keyboardist Ian McLagan, released in 1981 on Mercury Records.[2] Retaining Johnny Lee Schell from his debut, the album saw McLagan form the first edition of The Bump Band for the recording of the album, the line-up being McLagan (vocal, keyboards, guitar), Schell (guitar, vocal), Ricky Fataar (drums, piano, percussion, bass, vocal) and Ray Ohara (bass). The album is harder-edged than McLagan's others, with less emphasis on keyboards and more on guitars. As on his debut, his former bandmate Ron Wood appears as does saxophonist Bobby Keys. The album was McLagan's last solo album for nearly twenty years, though an extended play, Last Chance to Dance, came out in 1985 on Barking Dog Records.

Track listing

All tracks composed by Ian McLagan; except where indicated

  1. "Little Girl" (McLagan, Ron Wood) (3:03)
  2. "Alligator" (2:43)
  3. "If It's Lovin' You Want" (McLagan, Johnny Lee Schell) (3:34)
  4. "Casualty" (3:36)
  5. "Told a Tale on You" (McLagan, Ricky Fataar, Ray Ohara, Schell) (3:07)
  6. "Judy, Judy, Judy" (3:22)
  7. "So Lucky" ( 3:18)
  8. "Rebel Walk" (2:59)
  9. "Not Running Away" (McLagan, Fataar, Rob Fraboni) (3:45)
  10. "Boy's Gonna Get It" (3:57)

Personnel

  • Ian McLagan - lead vocals, organ, piano, guitars
  • Johnny Lee Schell - lead guitar, vocals
  • Ricky Fataar - drums, piano, bass, percussion, vocals
  • Ray Ohara - bass

with

Technical
  • Tim Kramer - engineer
  • Mike Doud - art direction, design
  • Gary Panter - cover painting and illustrations
    • The information above can be found in the CD booklet of Bump in the Night, available from Maniac Records.

References

  1. "Bump in the Night Ian McLagan". AllMusic. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  2. Riemenschneider, Chris (30 January 1998). "It's Been Ians". Austin American-Statesman. p. 16.
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