A Pauper in Paradise
A Pauper in Paradise is the fifth studio album by Italian-Canadian singer Gino Vannelli, released in 1977. It was notable for including contributions by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra on the second side,[3] including a fifteen-minute title track symphony that took Gino five months to write,[4] and which led A&M to offer a warning to Gino to expand his appeal or face rapid declines in album sales that since Powerful People had been a steady 300,000 albums per release.[5]
| A Pauper in Paradise | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 1977 | |||
| Studio | AIR Recording Studios, London, England EMI Abbey Road Studios, London, England  | |||
| Genre | Pop rock | |||
| Length | 40:53 | |||
| Label | A&M | |||
| Producer | Gino Vannelli Joe Vannelli  | |||
| Gino Vannelli chronology | ||||
  | ||||
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating | 
| AllMusic | |
| Rolling Stone Album Guide (1992) | |
Track listing
    
All tracks are written by Gino Vannelli.
| No. | Title | Length | 
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Mardi Gras" | 3:28 | 
| 2. | "Valleys of Valhalla" | 4:23 | 
| 3. | "The Surest Things Can Change" | 4:36 | 
| 4. | "One Night with You" | 4:19 | 
| 5. | "A Song and Dance" | 3:40 | 
| Total length: | 20:26 | |
| No. | Title | Length | 
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Black and Blue" | 4:23 | 
| 2. | "A Pauper in Paradise: 1st Movement[lower-alpha 1]" | 4:46 | 
| 3. | "A Pauper in Paradise: 2nd Movement[lower-alpha 1]" | 2:39 | 
| 4. | "A Pauper in Paradise: 3rd Movement[lower-alpha 1]" | 4:22 | 
| 5. | "A Pauper in Paradise: 4th Movement[lower-alpha 1]" | 4:20 | 
| Total length: | 20:27 | |
Personnel
    
- Jon Kelly – Remixing
 - Norm Kinney – Engineer
 - John Kurlander – Engineer
 - Steve Prestage – Assistant Engineer
 - Fabio Nicoli – Art Direction
 - Roland Young – Art Direction
 
Musicians
    
- Gino Vannelli – lead vocals
 - Joe Vannelli – Fender Rhodes, piano, programming, synthesizer, synthesizer arrangements, synthesizer string arrangement, backing vocals
 - Bill Meyers – piano, synthesizer, synthesizer bass, backing vocals
 - Nyboma Mwan Dido – bongos, congas
 - Jay Graydon – guitar
 - Casey Scheuerell - drums
 - John J. Mandel – percussion, timbales
 - Chris Rhyne – keyboards, synthesizer bass
 - Royal Philharmonic Orchestra – orchestra on "Black and Blue" and "A Pauper in Paradise"
 
Charts
    
| Chart (1977) | Peak
 position  | 
|---|---|
| Canada (RPM Magazine)[6] | 29 | 
| US Billboard 200[7] | 33 | 
Notes
    
- On some issues of the album, the last four tracks were combined into a single track titled “A Pauper In Paradise (In Four Movements)”
 
References
    
- Bil Carpenter. "A Pauper in Paradise – Gino Vannelli". All Music Group.
 - DeCurtis, Anthony; George-Warren, Holly and Henke, James; The Rolling Stone Album Guide – Completely New Reviews: Every Essential Album, Every Essential Artist, p. 733 ISBN 0679737294
 - Perkins, Don (1977-11-25). "Gino Vannelli – A Pauper in Paradise". The Star-Phoenix. Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. p. 6.
 - Dunkin, Zach (1977-12-06). "Vannelli Repays Public". Indianapolis News. p. 22.
 - d‘Agostino, John (1991-04-13). "Vannelli: Pop and Soulful". Los Angeles Times. p. F5.
 - "Gino Vannelli - A Pauper in Paradise" (PDF). RPM. Retrieved 2016-07-31.
 - "Gino Vannelli Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved October 15, 2021.
 
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