Night Moves | 
| Artist: Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band Label: Capitol
List Price: $11.98 Buy Used: $1.83 You Save: $10.15 (85%)
New (3) Used (19) Collectible (1) from $1.83
Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 92961
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1
UPC: 077774607520 EAN: 0077774607520 ASIN: B000002U8W
Release Date: October 25, 1990 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Selling from own private collection. Disc & front cover booklet in very good condition. Comes in slim jewel case, so does not include back cover insert or artwork. Ships with free upgrade to first class mail in bubble envelope. Sorry, no shipments to military addresses (APO, FPO)
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| Tracks:
| • | Rock And Roll Never Forgets | | • | Night Moves | | • | The Fire Down Below | | • | Sunburst | | • | Sunspot Baby | | • | Mainstreet | | • | Come To Poppa | | • | Ship Of Fools | | • | Mary Lou |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Bob Seger was seven years into his recording career and a regional rock star in the Detroit area when he broke nationally in 1976 with a concert album, Live Bullet, and his best-ever studio album, Night Moves. The song "Night Moves" is a brawny rock ballad about coming-of-age sexually; the album itself built on the experience of Seger's previous work to find him maturing artistically. Seger's a powerful singer who's always believed in the traditional rock trimmings of a big beat accompanied by Chuck Berry figures on the guitar and hammering riffs on the piano. He deploys such techniques with equal assurance on an oldie ("Mary Lou") and on his own heavier rockers ("The Fire Down Below," "Sunspot Baby"). But it was with songs like "Mainstreet" and "Night Moves" that he found a way to address the frustrations and fun of the working class lives of his primary audience. And with the rip-roaring "Rock and Roll Never Forgets," he produced an anthem that would keep them rocking way past the age of consent. --John Milward
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| Customer Reviews: Read 7 more reviews...
Seger's best studio album August 2, 2000 Brian D. Rubendall (Oakton, VA) 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
"Night Moves" is a 1970s American rock classic that holds its own with Bruce Springsteen's "Born to Run" as one of the best of that decade. What Seger may have lacked in comparison to Springsteen's epic songwriting, he more than makes up for with his ability to write a good hook and with his energetic performances and great singing. The song "Night Moves" has become a classic rock radio staple. But "Rock and Roll Never Forgets," "Mainstreet," "The Fire Down Below" and "Sunspot Baby" are all first rate songs. Seger still has a bit of a rough edge here that he would lose later on during his more polished "Like a Rock" television commercial phase. This album deserves to be in any classic rock fan's collection.
"AIN'T IT FUNNY HOW YOU REMEMBER ?..." (Night Moves is a near perfect Bob Seger classic) April 17, 2008 ol' nuff n' den sum (the Virginia coast, USA) 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
Bob Seger's Night Moves (1976) catapulted the hard working and long deserving rock n' roller into the national spotlight, and it's really no wonder that it did. It's an almost perfect album. With the classic title song, the reflective and atmospheric Main Street, and some basic hard driving rock n' roll, the album caught on with true rockers who were growing tired of pretentious, wimpy, and platform shoe lifted glitter rockers. With Night Moves, Bob Seger offered intelligent rock music with backbone and true grit, sung by a man with a soulful voice who looked and sounded like he could actually back up what he was singing. All-American Rock n' Roll! The music on Night Moves is mostly basic stuff, but highly enthusiastic with the smart professionalism that road tested experience brings. The Silver Bullet Band plays on half of the songs which were recorded in Bob's hometown of Detroit, and the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section plays on the other half, recorded at the famous Muscle Shoals Sound Studios in Alabama. Night Moves. Ain't it funny how you remember? The song brings back memories for a lot of people. Who doesn't remember the exuberance of youth and the "awkward teenage blues" that Bob himself so vividly recalls. We weren't in love, oh no, far from it We weren't searchin' for some pie in the sky summit We were just young and restless and bored Living by the sword Rock And Roll Never Forgets, Sunspot Baby, Mary Lou, and the smokin' hot Fire Down Below are all energetic and durable rock n' roll. It's the kind of stuff that rocks with the best, but hangs tough and doesn't lose it's mature and masculine character. Main Street is a classic, one of the best songs of Seger's career. Winding and picturesque, it describes a scene right out of 1950s-60s Main Street, U.S.A. from a young boy's perspective. In the pool halls, the hustlers and the losers I used to watch 'em through the glass Well, I'd stand outside at closing time Just to watch her walk on past Unlike all the other ladies she looked so young and sweet As she made her way alone down that empty street Come To Poppa is a funky, soulful, and pounding strut that Seger works for all it's worth. Great song. There's really nothing on Night Moves to complain about. It's almost perfect, actually. Atmospheric, and picturesque in a vivid and personal way, Night Moves touches many people in many different ways. It rocks like there's no tomorrow , it wistfully reflects, and it lusts for the wild touch of love's madness. Classic in every way, Night Moves is American rock n' roll at it's very best!
AN AMERICAN CLASSIC December 30, 1999 cd-heaven (ROCK CITY) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Bob Seger's masterpiece! An album filled with rock 'n' roll anthems and classics,this is as American as American music gets. Blue collar rock, tales of young love, tributes to rock 'n' roll, road travellin' blues, Bob Seger sang it all on Night Moves. Bringing Midwest life to the music, Seger opened alot of ears all over the country and world to what it's like to be living. An absolute classic, anyone who likes rock n roll, must have this album.
BORN TO RUN: THE POP VERSION June 27, 2000 mike joiner (japan) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
When this album came I was 14 years old and living in a small farm town in Kentucky. Night Moves was on the radio and catching on big time, but Bob Seger was far from a household name. I remember how hip I felt turning my friends onto this album, until, that is, my cousin from the Motor City came to visit and told me that everyone up north felt that Bob had sold out, and if I REALLY wanted to hear a great Seger album I should buy Live Bullet. Hip factor aside, I still felt it was a great album...and it is. From Night Moves to Mainstreet, it had FM radio tuned in...but the beauty lays in the lesser known cuts, Ship of Fools, Sunspot Baby, Rock and Roll Never Forgets. There's really not a bad track on the album. A lot of people feel that Night Moves scored big because it was primed by Bruce Springsteen's Born To Run...the market was ready for a more radio-friendly version...but for me, it worked the other way around. Night Moves eased me into Spingsteen's world. John Lennon once said that Imagine was Plastic Ono Band sugar coated for grandmothers. The same could be said for Night Moves and its relation to Bruce's 1975 masterpiece. One no better or more serious than the other, just more accessible. Looking back on it now, almost three decades later, it was a grand summer for rock and roll, one that can be experienced again. Like the man sang, Rock and Roll Never forgets, that's true...and if you want to remember it, here's a tip. Get in your car one night this summer, roll the windows down and take three CD's. Start with Meatloaf's Bat Out of Hell, follow it up with Seger's Night Moves and end it off with Born To Run. If you time it just right Jungleland should end just as the sun is coming up. It just might change your life. That's rock and roll. And this album is part of it.
RHYTHM! April 27, 1999 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This CD has RHYTHM! Bob's best by far, great songs, GREAT music. Wish he'd find the energy and fun-ness he had in these songs again.
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