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  1. Dog Eat Dog is the 12th studio album by the Canadian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell, released in 1985. It was her second album for Geffen Records. As with its predecessor Wild Things Run Fast, Dog Eat Dog moves away from Mitchell's previous folk and jazz influences in favour of 1980s studio pop.

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    PRODUCED BY JONI MITCHELL, LARRY KLEIN, MIKE SHIPLEY, THOMAS DOLBY EXCEPT WHERE NOTED OTHERWISE Engineered and Mixed by MIKE SHIPLEY at GALAXY STUDIOS Engineering Assistants ZYG WINARD, DAN MARNIEN Originally Mastered at PRECISION LACQUER By STEVEN MARCUSSEN MUSICIANS JONI MITCHELL – Vocals, Background Vocals Vocal Samples, Fairlight CMI and Assort...

  2. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the CD release of "Dog Eat Dog" on Discogs.

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    • CD, Album, Reissue
    • Allison Rapp
    • David Crosby. David Crosby, a longtime champion and onetime boyfriend, produced her debut album, Song to a Seagull. He also contributed backing vocals to 1974's Court and Spark ("Free Man in Paris" and "Down to You") and 1975's The Hissing of Summer Lawns ("In France They Kiss on Main Street").
    • Stephen Stills. Stephen Stills contributed to five Mitchell albums over the years: Song to a Seagull, Clouds, Ladies of the Canyon (1970), Blue (1971) and For the Roses (1972).
    • James Taylor. James Taylor, also a former boyfriend, could often be found in Mitchell's musical circle. He played guitar on four of Blue's tracks, sang backing vocals on Wild Things Run Fast (1982) and Dog Eat Dog (1985), and played guitar on the title track of Mitchell's most recent album, Shine (2007).
    • Carole King. Four months before Mitchell released Blue, Carole King released another staple of the singer-songwriter movement: Tapestry. Mitchell sang backing vocals on "Will You Love Me Tomorrow."
  3. Jan 20, 2015 · Wayne Shorter is widely considered to be the greatest living jazz composer, and one of the greatest jazz saxophonists of all time. But the mind and art of Wayne Shorter orbit far and wide beyond the gravitational center of any one category or title.

  4. DOG EAT DOG "Good Friends" This song went through several rewrites. In the first draft, I wrote a line that went, "Sometimes change comes at you like a broadside accident, you get minor cuts and bruises, that's all, you can hammer out the dents."

  5. Dog Eat Dog is the 12th album by Joni Mitchell, released in 1985. It was her second album for Geffen Records. The album was a departure for Mitchell due to its synthetic sound (featuring production work by British synthesiser musician Thomas Dolby).