Showing posts with label Jack Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jack Jones. Show all posts

Friday, November 29, 2024

Burt Bacharach - Burt Bacharach's Greatest Misses (1962)

While Burt Bacharach did score some early hits in the 1950's, and wrote songs recorded by some of the biggest stars of the day, as well as some of the more obscure ones, it wasn’t until Dionne Warwick's slew of hits with his and Hal David's tunes that he became a ubiquitous name in pop music. His early attempts at song-writing were recorded by a variety of artists, including Connie Stevens, Jack Jones, The Wanderers, The Exotics, Jane Morgan, and Vic Dana, but simply put, these are songs that didn’t make it; none of them charted at all. The vast majority of these tracks were written by the Bacharach/David team, but there are some exceptions, with 'Dreamin' All the Time', for example, being written by Bacharach and Bob Hilliard. Although these are early examples of Bacharach's work, they are still lushly orchestrated, dreamy pop songs with traces of his melodic trademark, as well as his sweeping harmonies. One interesting cut is the Shepherd Sisters' 'Deeply', written with Norman Gimble, which was an early girl group rock tune that featured the marimba sound from 'Do You Know The Way To San Jose'. There were a few duds along the way, of course, proving that Bacharach is human after all, but they tended to be songs from the late 50's and very early 60's, and by 1962 he and David had started to produce music that would point the way to their biggest hits, such as 'Anyone Who Had A Heart' and 'Walk On By', just a year later.



Track listing

01 Manpower (The Exotics 1962)
02 And This Is Mine (Connie Francis 1961)
03 Don't Envy Me (Joey Powers 1962)
04 Dreamin' All The Time (Jack Jones 1962)
05 Forever My Love (Jane Morgan 1962)
06 Sinner's Devotion (Tina Robin 1961)
07 The Answer To Everything (Sam Fletcher 1962)
08 Joanie's Forever (Buddy Clinton 1960)
09 Waitin' For Charlie To Come Home (Jane Morgan 1962)
10 You're Following Me (Jimmy Breedlove 1962)
11 I Could Make You Mine (The Wanderers 1960)
12 Call Off The Wedding (Babs Tino 1962)
13 Deeply (The Shepherd Sisters 1961)
14 For All Time (The Russells 1962)
15 The Story Behind My Tears (Vic Dana 1961)
16 Somebody Else's Sweetheart (The Wanderers 1961)
17 Come Completely To Me (Steve Rossi 1960)

Friday, March 15, 2024

Various Artists - The Hitmakers Sing Carole Bayer Sager (1980)

Carole Bayer was born on 8 March 1944 in Manhattan, New York City, and while still a student at New York City High School she wrote her first pop hit, 'A Groovy Kind Of Love', with Toni Wine, which was recorded by UK group The Mindbenders, whose version was a worldwide hit and reached number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100. She wrote many hits during the 1970's, often collaborating with Melissa Manchester on songs that would appear on Manchester's solo albums of the period. Her songs from this time include 'Come In From The Rain' and 'Midnight Blue', which would go on to be covered by many other artists, and she also scored major hits collaborating with Albert Hammond on 'When I Need You' and Bruce Roberts with 'You're The Only One'. She married record producer Andrew Sager in 1970, and from then on worked under the name Carole Bayer Sager, under which name she released her first recording as a singer with her 1977 self-titled album 'Carole Bayer Sager', produced by Brooks Arthur. It included the hit single 'You're Moving Out Today', a song which she co-wrote with Bette Midler and Bruce Roberts, and it topped the charts in Australia, and also reached number 6 in the UK Singles Chart. The album also included her own versions of two songs previously recorded by Melissa Manchester – 'Home To Myself' and the oft-covered 'Come In From The Rain', but it wasn't long before other artists picked up on the rest of the songs on it, and by 1980 all bar one track had received a cover version, so here are the best of them in a reinterpretation of Carole Bayer Sager's debut release, with a lovely Gladys Knight cover added to the end to make up for the missing 'Aces'.   



Track listing

01 Come In From The Rain (Diana Ross 1977)  
02 Until The Next Time (Torill 1978)  
03 Don't Wish Too Hard (Jack Jones 1980)
04 Sweet Alibis (Carmen McRae 1980) 
05 I'd Rather Leave While I'm In Love (Dusty Springfield 1978)
06 Steal Away Again (Joey Travolta 1978)
07 You're Moving Out Today (Bette Midler 1976)
08 Shy As A Violet (Peter Allen 1975)
09 Home To Myself (Brenda And The Tabulations 1976)
10 I'm Coming Home Again (Gladys Knight 1978)

Tuesday, October 11, 2022

Various Artists - The Hitmakers Sing Randy Newman (1975)

Like the recent Tony Hazzard post, when Randy Newman's debut album came out in 1968, nearly all of the songs had already been released by groups and artists as singles or album tracks, generally in more fully-realised arrangements than Newman's own versions. Newman had been a professional songwriter since he was 17, and cited Ray Charles as his greatest influence growing up, and his first single as a performer was 1962's 'Golden Gridiron Boy', released when he was 18. The single flopped and so he chose to concentrate on songwriting and arranging for the next several years, with an early writing credit being 'They Tell Me It's Summer', which was used as the b-side of the Fleetwoods 1962 single 'Lovers By Night, Strangers By Day'. This led to further commissions from the Fleetwoods, as well as Pat Boone, and some of his other early songs were recorded by Gene Pitney, Jerry Butler, Petula Clark, Dusty Springfield, Jackie DeShannon, the O'Jays, and Irma Thomas, among others, with his work as a songwriter meeting with particular success in the UK. Top 40 UK hits written by Newman included Cilla Black's 'I've Been Wrong Before', Gene Pitney's 'Nobody Needs Your Love', and 'Just One Smile', and the Alan Price Set's 'Simon Smith And The Amazing Dancing Bear'. In fact, Price championed Newman by featuring seven of his songs on his 1967 album 'A Price On His Head'. Newman's eponymous 1968 debut album was a critical success but never entered the Billboard Top 200, and apparently the album sold so poorly that Warner offered buyers the opportunity to trade it in for another record in the company's catalog. It's hard to believe that the album was out of print for over 15 years until it was issued on CD in 1995, as Newman's songs have now been covered by an impressive number of artists, including Barbra Streisand, Helen Reddy, Bette Midler, Alan Price, Van Dyke Parks, Dave Van Ronk, Judy Collins, Glen Campbell, Cass Elliot, Art Garfunkel, the Everly Brothers, Claudine Longet, Bonnie Raitt, Dusty Springfield, Tom Odell, Nina Simone, Lynn Anderson, Wilson Pickett, Pat Boone, Neil Diamond and Peggy Lee, and 'I Think It's Going To Rain Today' has become something of a standard. Ten of the album's eleven tracks were covered both before and after its release, and despite Newman's undoubted songwriting skills, even his most ardent fans couldn't say that his vocals are particularly melodious, and so having professional singers performing his songs adds to them them immensely. As the original album was a bit short, I've added similar covers of half a dozen songs from his 1970 follow-up '12 Songs' to boost it to a very enjoyable 47 minutes.    



Track listing

01 Love Story (The Brothers 1967)
02 No One Ever Hurt This Bad (The Alan Price Set 1967)
03 Living Without You (Keith Shields 1967)
04 So Long Dad (Manfred Mann 1967)
05 I Think He's Hiding (Jack Sheldon 1969)
06 Linda (Jack Jones 1969)
07 Cowboy (Three Dog Night 1970)
08 The Beehive State (The Doobie Brothers 1971)
09 I Think It's Going To Rain Today (Eric Burdon & The Animals 1967)
10 Davy The Fat Boy (Joe Brown 1968)
11 Have You Seen My Baby? (Chris Smither 1970)  
12 Let's Burn Down The Cornfield (Lee Hazlewood 1969)
13 Lucinda (Joe Cocker 1975)
14 Yellow Man (Georgie Fame & Alan Price 1971)
15 Old Kentucky Home (The Beau Brummels 1967)
16 Rosemary (Blood, Sweat & Tears 1973)