Jealous Lover

Jealous Lover is a four track, 12" EP released by the hard rock band Rainbow in 1981. The EP reached #151 on Billboard Magazine's Top 200 albums chart. Tracks include two songs previously unavailable in the US, and two songs from their full length album "Difficult to Cure". The cover art featured the same Hipgnosis photography used for the "Difficult to Cure" album, with a different background.

The title song "Jealous Lover" received significant airplay on Album-oriented rock radio stations in the US, reaching #13 on Billboard's Rock Tracks chart, which tracked AOR airplay. The song had previously been issued as a b-side to "Can't Happen Here" in the UK and elsewhere, but at the time was not available on any full length album. It does appear on the Finyl Vinyl CD.

The second track, "Weiss Heim" was previously only available as the b-side to the UK single "All Night Long", and also never before issued in the USA. It does appear on the Finyl Vinyl CD.

Both tracks on side two, "Can't Happen Here" and "I Surrender" had been issued as singles and included on the album "Difficult to Cure".

"I Surrender" was notable as a track not composed by the band. Rather it was written by Russ Ballard, formerly of Argent and at the time enjoying moderate success as a songwriter for other artists. Ballard had also written "Since You Been Gone" previously recorded by Rainbow.

The "Jealous Lover" EP has never been issued on compact disc, though all of the songs are available on CD as part of other albums and compilations.

Read more about Jealous Lover:  Tracks

Famous quotes containing the words jealous and/or lover:

    So motionless, she seemed stone dead—just seemed:
    She was too old for death, too old for life,
    For as if jealous of all living forms
    She had lain there before bivalves began
    To catacomb their shells on western mountains.
    Edwin John Pratt (1882–1964)

    A lover without indiscretion is no lover at all. Circumspection and devotion are a contradiction in terms.
    Thomas Hardy (1840–1928)