Straight Up (Badfinger album)

Straight Up
Studio album by
Released13 December 1971
Recorded30 May – 6 October 1971
StudioEMI, AIR and Command (London)
GenrePower pop
Length42:11
LabelApple
ProducerTodd Rundgren, George Harrison
Badfinger chronology
No Dice
(1970)
Straight Up
(1971)
Ass
(1973)
Singles from Straight Up
  1. "Day After Day"
    Released: 10 November 1971 (US);
    14 January 1972 (UK)
  2. "Baby Blue"
    Released: 20 March 1972 (US)

Straight Up is the fourth studio album by the Welsh rock band Badfinger, released in December 1971 in the United States and February 1972 in Britain. Issued on the Beatles' Apple record label, it includes the hit singles "Day After Day" and "Baby Blue", and the similarly popular "Name of the Game", all of which were written by singer and guitarist Pete Ham. The album marked a departure from the more rock-oriented sound of Badfinger's previous releases, partly as a result of intervention by Apple Records regarding the band's musical direction.

Production on what became Straight Up lasted nine months, at the start of which the group made an album's worth of recordings with producer Geoff Emerick, in between their touring commitments. Once Apple had decided to shelve these recordings, George Harrison took over production, only for him to become indisposed with events associated with the Concert for Bangladesh, at which Badfinger also performed. Harrison then handed the project to American producer Todd Rundgren, who oversaw recording for most of the album.

Although Straight Up received a mixed response from critics on release, many reviewers now regard it as the band's best album. Rolling Stone critic David Fricke has referred to it as "Badfinger's power-pop apex".[1] The album was reissued on CD in 1993, with bonus tracks, and remastered again in 2010.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Fricke/RS was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search