Album Details
Title: High Adventure Artist: Kenny Loggins Release Date: 9/1982 Re-Released On: 7/28/2009 Label: Columbia, Sony Music Distribution, Sony/Columbia Duration: 41:18 UPCs: 074643812726, 079893467320, 5099747475825, 074643812740, 079897007225, 4547366047653 Genre: Rock Styles: Soft Rock, Contemporary Pop/Rock Moods: Amiable/Good-Natured, Earnest, Poignant, Rousing, Sentimental, Calm/Peaceful, Gentle, Intimate, Laid-Back/Mellow, Romantic, Searching, Smooth, Soothing, Sweet Total Copies: 6 Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1 |
Track Listings
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Don't Fight It
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Heartlight
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I Gotta Try
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Swear Your Love
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The More We Try
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Heart to Heart
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If It's Not What You're Looking For
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It Must Be Imagination
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Only a Miracle
Additional Releases
| Year | Type | Label | Catalog # | | 2009 | CD | Sony Music Distribution | 2283 | | 2001 | CD | Sony Music Distribution | 34673 | | 1988 | CD | Sony/Columbia | 4747582 | | 1982 | CD | Columbia | 38127 |
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Other Editions
- No other editions were found for this album.
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Album Review
Well, if Duran Duran decided to rip off Raiders of the Lost Ark, why not Kenny Loggins? After all, the swashbuckling cover to High Adventure fits this album, since it finds him relying equally on rockers and melodic pop/rock. The album kicks off with Loggins' hardest-rocking single, "Don't Fight It," a surging arena-rocker duet with Steve Perry. This signals that the rest of the record will be harder than his previous record and that's true to a certain extent, since this doesn't just rock on occasion, it also has his best ballads and mid-tempo charmers. In other words, it's his best album, showcasing all sides of his personality effectively. "Don't Fight It" is a great single, but the best moment here is "Heart to Heart," the second of two pop classics Loggins cut as a solo artist. Here, he has a great mid-tempo groove, a good lyric and an indelible melody that is soft rock at its finest. The rest of the album may not match this height -- most of the genre didn't -- but it's all strong (though it's awful strange that "Heartlight," a tribute to the children's foundation Heartlight, has the oddest melody he's ever written -- an ominous march that just gets creepier when the children's choir pops up at the end). Celebrate Me Home may be more consistent, but this is the most diverse record he ever cut, blessed by fine studio craft and a nice reliance on pseudo-new wave production techniques. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Credits
| Name | Credits | | Abraham Laboriel | Bass | | Albhy Galuten | Synthesizer, Strings | | Bruce Botnick | Producer | | Christ Memorial Youth Choir | ? | | David Foster | Synthesizer, Keyboards, Piano, Producer | | David Paich | Synthesizer, Keyboards | | David Sanborn | Saxophone | | Dennis Conway | Drums | | Derek Jackson | Bass | | Heartlight School Singers & Dancers | ?, Vocals | | James Newton Howard | Keyboards, Synthesizer | | Jon Clarke | Recorder, Percussion, Wind | | Kenny Loggins | Keyboards, Guitar, Producer, Vocals, Guitar (Rhythm) | | Lenny Castro | Percussion | | Max Gronenthal | Vocals, Vocals (Background) | | Michael Hamilton | Guitar, Vocals, Bass, Bells | | Michael McDonald | Piano, Vocals, Keyboards | | Nathan East | Bass | | Neil Geraldo | Guitar (Rhythm), Guitar | | Neil Larsen | Vocals, Keyboards, Synthesizer | | Paulinho Da Costa | Conga, Percussion | | Richard Page | Vocals, Vocals (Background) | | Steve Forman | Percussion | | Steve George | Vocals (Background), Vocals | | Steve Lukather | Guitar | | Steve Perry | Vocals | | Steve Wood | Keyboards, Vocals | | Tom Snow | Synthesizer | | Tris Imboden | Harmonica, Percussion, Drums | | Vernon Porter | Bass |
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