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| Cliff Richard | Primary Artist |
| Terry Britten | Guitar |
| Clem Cattini | Drums |
| Tony Rivers | Background Vocals |
| Alan Tarney | Bass |
| Graham Todd | Keyboards |
| Alan Harding | Vocals, Background Vocals |
| John Farrar | Producer |
| Hank Marvin | Producer |
| Tony Clark | Engineer |
| Richard Hewson | String Arrangements |
| Roger Quested | Engineer |
| Bruce Welch | Producer |
Anonymous
Posted April 25, 2010
No text was provided for this review.
Editorial Reviews
All Music Guide - Dave Thompson
I'm Nearly Famous is the album which marked Cliff Richard's return from the commercial and, in many ways, creative void which had consumed him since the end of the 1960s. Recorded with former Shadow Bruce Bennett in the production chair and boasting the most consistently excellent clutch of songs and performances Richard had mustered in over a decade, the album was previewed by the lovely "Miss You Night," opened with the neo-disco "I Can't Ask for Anything More," and peaked with "Devil Woman," a rocker which became his first ever U.S. Top Ten hit. But they were simply the best-known standouts. "It's No Use Pretending" was an anthemic ballad with more than a hint of Elton...