|
The discography of Linda Ronstadt, an American rock, pop, and country artist, consists of 28 studio albums, numerous compilation albums, and 63 singles. After recording three albums with her folk rock band, The Stone Poneys, Ronstadt debuted on Capitol Records as a solo artist with 1969's ''Hand Sown ... Home Grown''. Between 1970 and 1973, Ronstadt released three studio albums: two on the Capitol label, ''Silk Purse'' (1970) and ''Linda Ronstadt'' (1971); and one on the Asylum label, ''Don't Cry Now'' (1973). Developing a country rock sound similar to that of Eagles, Ronstadt recorded 1974's ''Heart Like a Wheel'', which later sold over two million copies and spawned the #1 hits "When Will I Be Loved" and "You're No Good".〔 Her next album was 1975's ''Prisoner in Disguise'', which followed the same musical format and contained a Top Five cover of "Heat Wave", followed by a similar album titled ''Hasten Down the Wind'' (1976). Her 1977 release, ''Simple Dreams'', followed a more rock-oriented format. It went Triple platinum in the US and produced two simultaneous Top Five hits with the Platinum-certified "Blue Bayou" and "It's So Easy". The hits included "Poor Poor Pitiful Me", "Tumbling Dice", and "I Never Will Marry". The following year, ''Living in the USA'' included a cover of Chuck Berry's "Back in the U.S.A.", and it contained a Top 10 remake of "Ooh Baby Baby". In addition to the conventional Asylum release that is listed below, special limited-edition releases were also made of this album in red vinyl and picture disc. "Just One Look" was the album's third hit single. Ronstadt's first disc of the 1980s was ''Mad Love''. It debuted at number 5 on the ''Billboard'' album chart and quickly became her seventh straight million-selling album. It produced Top 10 singles with "How Do I Make You" and "Hurt So Bad". In 1983, Ronstadt changed musical directions towards traditional pop music, recording ''What's New'', which certified 3× multi-Platinum in the United States. It was succeeded by 1984's ''Lush Life'' and 1986's ''For Sentimental Reasons'' (both Platinum-certified). To celebrate her Mexican American heritage, Ronstadt recorded the Spanish-language album ''Canciones de Mi Padre'' in 1987, selling more than two million copies in the US and winning Ronstadt a Grammy Award. The same year, she also teamed with Emmylou Harris and Dolly Parton for the collaboration album ''Trio'', which spawned four country music hits, including the number one single, "To Know Him Is To Love Him". Her 1989 release, titled ''Cry Like a Rainstorm, Howl Like the Wind'', was Ronstadt's first pop music album in seven years.〔 It produced two Grammy Award-winning duets with Aaron Neville on the Billboard Hot 100: the Gold-certified #2 hit "Don't Know Much" and the #11 hit "All My Life". After releasing two Spanish albums in the early 1990s, Ronstadt returned to pop with 1993's ''Winter Light'', which was followed by 1995's return to country rock: ''Feels Like Home''. Her 1998 release, ''We Ran'', featured more rock-oriented album material. In 1999, Ronstadt reunited with Harris and Parton for ''Trio 2'', which won Ronstadt her eleventh Grammy Award and nineteenth Gold album. That year she also recorded a Southwestern-inspired release with Harris, ''Western Wall: The Tucson Sessions''. Her 2004 release, ''Hummin' to Myself'', was Ronstadt's fourth album of traditional jazz standards . In 2006 she made her final studio album – ''Adieu False Heart'' – mixing Cajun music with rock in a collaboration with Ann Savoy.〔 Ronstadt has sold over 30 million records in the United States according to the Recording Industry Association of America.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=List of US Best-selling music artists )〕 == Studio albums == 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Linda Ronstadt discography」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|