This album marked a turning point for the group as they approached AOR.
Released in 1979, it reached number 3 on the Billboard pop chart and number 1 on the R&B chart.
Steve Lukather, Jeff Porcaro and other members of Toto were also employed in the sessions. The album includes the smash-hit disco song "Boogie Wonderland" and the classic ballad "After the Love Is Gone" (#2 in the US singles, Grammy Award-winning).
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A:
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1)
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In The Stone
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2)
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Can't Let Go
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3)
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After The Love Has Gone
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4)
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Let Your Feelings Show
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B:
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1)
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Boogie Wonderland
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2)
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Star
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3)
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Wait
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4)
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Rock That!
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5)
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You And I
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Arranged By [Strings] - David Foster (A1, A3, B4)
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Piano, Synthesizer [Oberheim], Synthesizer [Moog] - Larry Dunn
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Bass - Verdine White
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Vocals [Lead and Background], Congas, Percussion - Philip Bailey
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Producer - Maurice White
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Vocals [Lead and Background], Drums, Kalimba - Maurice White
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Saxophone [Alto, Tenor & Baritone] - Don Myrick
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Saxophone [Solo] - Don Myrick (A3)
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Arranged By [Horn] - Jerry Hey (A1, A3, B3, B4)
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Trumpet - Rahmlee Michael Davis
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Trumpet [Solo] - Rahmlee Michael Davis (B2)
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Engineer, Remix - George Massenburg
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Arranged By [Horn and String] - Tom Tom 84 (A2, A4, B2, B3, B5)
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Guitar - Fred White
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Producer - Al McKay (B1)
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Engineer - Tom Perry
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Arranged By [Horn and String] - Ben Wright
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Trombone - Louis Satterfield
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Percussion - Ralph Johnson
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Guitar - Johnny Graham
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Engineer [Assistant] - Ross Pallone
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Tenor Saxophone - Andrew Woolfolk
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Engineer [Assistant] - Craig Widby
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Design [Album] - Roger Carpenter (2)
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Illustration [Album] - Shusei Nagaoka