1976 studio album by Emmylou Harris
Luxury Liner is the fourth studio album by American country music artist Emmylou Harris , released in 1976. The album was Harris' second successive number one country album on the Billboard charts , although, unlike the preceding Elite Hotel , there were no number one hits from this album. The highest-charting singles were the number six Chuck Berry cover "(You Never Can Tell) C'est la Vie" and the number eight "Making Believe " (originally a hit for Kitty Wells ). However, the album may be better known for including the first cover version of Townes Van Zandt 's 1972 song "Pancho and Lefty ", which subsequently became Van Zandt's best-known composition.
At the 20th Annual Grammy Awards , one of the album's tracks and hit singles, "Making Believe ", was nominated for Best Female Country Vocal Performance but the award went to Crystal Gayle for "Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue ".
Track listing
Personnel Credits adapted from the liner notes of Luxury Liner .[ 5]
Brian Ahern - acoustic guitar, electric guitar, finger-style acoustic guitar
Mike Auldridge - dobro
Dianne Brooks - backing vocals
James Burton - electric guitar
Rodney Crowell - acoustic guitar, electric guitar, high-strung guitar, backing vocals
Rick Cunha - acoustic guitar
Hank DeVito - pedal steel guitar
Emory Gordy Jr. - bass
Glen Hardin - piano, electric piano , string arrangements
Emmylou Harris - vocals, acoustic guitar
Nicolette Larson - duet vocals
Albert Lee - acoustic guitar, electric guitar, mandolin , backing vocals
Dolly Parton - backing vocals
Herb Pedersen - backing vocals
Mickey Raphael - harmonica, bass harmonica
Ricky Skaggs - fiddle , mandolin
Fayssoux Starling - backing vocals
John Ware - drums
Technical
Brian Ahern - production, engineering
Donivan Cowart - engineering
Bradley Hartman - engineering
Stuart Taylor - engineering
Miles Wilkinson - engineering
Charts
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
Release history
References
^ 2004 Warner Bros reissue - 'originally issued as Warner Bros #BS-2998/#BSK-3115(12/28/76'
^ Ankeny, Jason. Luxury Liner at AllMusic
^ Christgau, Robert (1981). "Consumer Guide '70s: H" . Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies . Ticknor & Fields . ISBN 089919026X . Retrieved February 24, 2019 – via robertchristgau.com.
^ Sweeting, Adam (April 9, 2004). "Emmylou Harris, Luxury Liner" . The Guardian . Retrieved January 24, 2016 .
^ Luxury Liner (liner notes). Emmylou Harris . Warner Bros. Nashville . 1976.{{cite AV media notes }}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link )
^ "Emmylou Harris Chart History (Billboard 200)" . Billboard . Retrieved June 3, 2021.
^ "Emmylou Harris Chart History (Top Country Albums)" . Billboard . Retrieved June 3, 2021.
^ "Top Country Albums – Year-End 1977" . Billboard . Retrieved June 3, 2021 .
^ Harris, Emmylou (December 29, 1975). "Luxury Liner (Liner Notes)". Warner Bros. Records . BS-2998 (LP); M5-2998 (Cassette).
Studio albums as a solo artist Studio albums as a collaboration Compilation albums Live albums Soundtrack albums Video albums Box sets Contributions and appearances