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Difficult to Cure is the fifth studio album by the British hard rock band Rainbow, and it was released in 1981.It was the first album to feature Bobby Rondinelli on drums and Joe Lynn Turner on lead vocals after the departures of Cozy Powell and Graham Bonnet respectively, following the release of Down to Earth.
Video albums: 10: Music videos: 10: ... Formats: 2xLP, digital download; Also released as part of the Down to Earth Tour 1979 box set
The Very Best of Rainbow is a greatest hits compilation album by the British hard rock band Rainbow.It was released in 1997 and features material ranging from 1975's Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow to 1983's Bent Out of Shape.
Bent Out of Shape would be Rainbow's final studio album before their 12-year hiatus from the studio. It also proved to be the band's final studio album with vocalist Joe Lynn Turner, bassist Roger Glover and keyboardist David Rosenthal, and their only one to feature drummer Chuck Burgi, who replaced Bobby Rondinelli just prior to the album's recording sessions.
Nine months later, on December 12, the album was re-released in three different editions: two CD+DVD editions and a 2CD-only edition. The CD+DVD editions include the Over The Rainbow album and a special DVD: Type A includes all music videos of the group included on the albums and Type B includes performances of all Korean promotional tracks at that time being, "Gossip Girl", "Not Your Girl ...
The album showpiece, according to general consensus, is the eight-minute-and-26-second track "Stargazer", features the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra, and originally had a keyboard intro as evidenced on the 2011 Deluxe Edition's "Rough Mix" version.
The Best of Rainbow is the first compilation album from British hard rock group Rainbow, released in 1981.. This compilation album is slightly different from the similarly titled album from 1980, which was released only in Japan, [2] and features mostly previously-released studio cuts, taken from the five studio albums Rainbow had released at that point.
The album "is perhaps the most divisive record in Rainbow’s catalogue" according to Record Collector reviewer, because of "Blackmore's single-minded pursuit of mainstream success" and the departure from the sound of preceding albums. He adds that this is a "strong" album with many "classic radio" staples, but the second disc of the Deluxe ...