Elevator (The Rollers album)

Elevator is a 1979 rock album by the Bay City Rollers. Having replaced longtime lead singer Les McKeown with Duncan Faure, the group shortened their name to simply The Rollers, and pursued a more rocking, power-pop sound than their previous work.

The album, released by Arista, was critically acclaimed but poorly received commercially. Neither the album itself or any single releases would hit the charts.

The album was reissued on CD in 2008, with no bonus cuts however.

Music
Dave Thompson of AllMusic wrote that the album featured a hard rock, AOR direction. Billboard felt the music was reminiscent of 1965-66 era Beatles, with Trouser Press even comparing the album to the Beatles' Rubber Soul (1965).

Critical reception
AllMusic gave the album four stars out of five.

Side One

 * 1) "Stoned Houses #1" (Faulkner, Wood, Faure)
 * 2) "Elevator" (Faulkner, Faure, Wood)
 * 3) "Playing in a Rock and Roll Band" (Faure, Tom Seufurt)
 * 4) "Hello & Welcome Home" (Faulkner, Faure)
 * 5) "I Was Eleven" (Faure)
 * 6) "Stoned Houses #2" (Faulkner)

Side Two

 * 1) "Turn on the Radio" (Faulkner, Faure, Wood, Alan Longmuir)
 * 2) "Instant Relay" (Faulkner)
 * 3) "Tomorrow's Just a Day Away" (Faulkner, Wood)
 * 4) "Who'll Be My Keeper" (Faure)
 * 5) "Back on the Road Again" (Faulkner, Faure, Wood, Alan Longmuir)
 * 6) "Washington's Birthday" (Wood, Faulkner, Faure)

Group members

 * Duncan Faure — lead vocals, piano, Moog synthesizer
 * Eric Faulkner – electric and acoustic guitars, backing vocals; lead vocals on "Playing in a Rock & Roll Band"
 * Alan Longmuir – electric guitar, backing vocals, bass, string machine
 * Stuart "Woody" Wood – bass, backing vocals, piano, moog, string machine, clavinet; lead vocals on "Tomorrow's Just A Day Away"
 * Derek Longmuir – drums, percussion

Other personnel

 * Peter Ker – producer
 * Rod Thear – engineer
 * Gary Gray – mixing engineer
 * John Naslen – mixing engineer