"There'll Never Be Another for Me" Released: June 1978
New Horizons is the thirty first studio album by American country music artist, Connie Smith. The album was released in March 1978 on Monument Records and was produced by Ray Baker. It was Smith's final studio album released under Monument and contained four singles released between 1977 and 1978, including "I Just Want to Be Your Everything."
New Horizons consisted of ten tracks new material recorded by Connie Smith. The album included three cover versions: "The Wayward Wind" originally by Gogi Grant, "I Just Want to Be Your Everything" by Andy Gibb and "You Light Up My Life" by Debby Boone. Like her previous album for Monument, Pure Connie Smith,New Horizons was recorded with material that had a softer Country pop sound. Under Monument Records, Smith's musical style changed from Pure Country (which she had recorded under RCA Victor and Columbia) to Adult Contemporary and Disco. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic reviewed Smith's 1993 compilation, Greatest Hits on Monument (which included seven tracks from New Horizons) and did not receive her musical sound well, stating, "Smith still sings well throughout it, but it's not a very good showcase for her talents, nor is it very good as crossover pop -- it's too square and middle of the road, making the urban cowboy bubbling up at the time seem risky and edgy." Erlewine did find Smith's cover of "I Just Want to Be Your Everything," "relatively faithful" to the original version.[1] It was issued on a LP album, with five songs on each side of the record.[2]
Release[]
New Horizons spawned four singles to the Billboard Country Chart between 1977 and 1978. The first single was Smith's cover of "I Just Want to Be Your Everything." Released in September 1977, the song became the album's biggest hit, reaching #14 on the Billboard MagazineHot Country Songs chart and #23 on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart, becoming her final Top 20 hit. The second single, "Lovin' You Baby" reached the Billboard Country Top 40 at #34, becoming her final Top 40 single.[3] The third single, "They'll Never Be Another for Me" peaked only at #68 on the Billboard Country Chart. The album itself "stiffed," according to Stephen Thomas Erlewine, meaning it did not chart the BillboardTop Country Albums chart.[1]
Sheldon Kurland, Byron T. Bach, George Binkley III, Marvin D. Chantry, Roy Christensen, Carl Gorodetzky, Lennie Haight, Wilfred Lehman, John A. Moore, Steven M. Smith, Gary Vanosdale, Pamela Vanosdale — strings