Red and Blue | |
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Studio album by Cee Farrow | |
Released | 1983 |
Genre | New wave, synthpop |
Length | 38:35 |
Label | Rocshire Records |
Producer | Andy Lunn |
Red and Blue is the debut and only album from German singer Cee Farrow, released in 1983.
Originally a model, Farrow signed to Rocshire Records to release a full studio album. He worked with producer Andy Lunn and co-wrote various tracks, mainly with German keyboardist Lothar Krell.Red and Blue was recorded at Hotline Studios between March–December 1982 and was released in 1983 in America. The album was not a commercial success, although the lead single "Should I Love You" peaked at No. 82 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 91 on the Billboard R&B Chart.
A second single, "Don't Ask Why", was also released, while "Wildlife Romance" was issued as a 12" promotional single.
The album remains out-of-print to date, having never been issued on CD or made available digitally. After the album's release, Rocshire Records suffered legal problems, which culminated in the seizing of the label's assets in January 1984. The label was shut down by U.S. Federal Marshalls as it had been financed entirely by millions of dollars that owner Rocky Davis' wife Shirley Davis had embezzled from Hughes Aircraft while she was working as an accountant there. As such, the label's master tapes remain in possession of the Feds.
After the album's release, Farrow reportedly opened a nightclub "The Bitter End" in 1985 within Hollywood. He eventually re-surfaced with another single "Imagination" in 1991. Farrow died in May 1993 in California of a brain disease attributed to AIDS.
"Should I Love You"