Showing posts with label Hal David. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hal David. Show all posts

March 14, 2024

45 RPMs 79: Perry Como ~ Catch A Falling Star

  ~   

45 RPM, side 1 
 photo by Styrous®
     
 
On March 14, 1958, Perry Como had the honor of receiving the every first certified gold single by the Recording Industry Association of American (RIAA) with his recording of Catch A Falling Star. It was featured in the 1993 film A Perfect World, a 1993 American crime drama film directed by Clint Eastwood.    
    
I loved, and still do, this song. It has a languid syncopated tango beat intro that goes into a jazzy, bouncy but gentle beat with a terrific vocal backup featuring mostly men. It alernates back and forth and is really delightful, fun and works into a beautifully constructed roundCatch A Falling Star was originally a mono recording but there is an electronically reprocessed version in stereo on YouTube (link below).       
 
Como was a 50-something holdover in a cozy cardigan sweater and stood for everything that youthful rock and roll did not. A "swooners" club voted Como "Crooner of the Year" in 1943. Where rock and roll promised sex, excitement and social change, Como’s act evoked much more staid pursuits. Yet Catch A Falling Star was not the only hit record for Como in the early years of the rock-and-roll “revolution.” Songs like Hot Diggity and Round And Round more than held their own against more rebellious fare, and while they might not have been “cool,” they didn’t need to be in order to find an audience in late 1950s America.    
 
However, in the mid-sixties, French singer Françoise Hardy managed to rock it up and Mrs. Miller had to destroy it as only she could. In 1986, André van Duin sang it in Dutch. Then Adam & the Ants took it to punk/new wave levels in the 90's (links below).       

Elvis Presley was the third artist to receive such an honor for Hard Headed Woman in August of 1958, his single Gold Record had him tied on the RIAA’s list with Lawrence Welk (whose Calcutta was certified Gold in February 1961).    
 
 
45 RPM, side 2 
 photo by Styrous®

 
The "B" side has the song, Magic Moments written by Hal David and Bert Bacharach with back up by the Ray Charles Singers. It's bouncy with an interesting bassoon and very happy but I actually hated it as it was dreadfully sappy. 

In his 2003 book Burt Bacharach, Song by Song, Serene Dominic comments:

"Combined with the quizzical bassoon, the whistling and the ghastly white shadings of the Ray Charles Singers, these distant recollections must seem like occurrences on another planet to later generations."     
Both songs were big hits but I thought Falling Star was so much better by miles. 
 

  







        
Tracklist: 

Side 1: 

A - Magic Moments, written by Hal David-Bert Bacharach* - 2:41

Side 2: 

B - Catch A Falling Star, written by Lee Pockris*, Paul Vance - 2:25

Companies, etc.

    Recorded At – RCA Records Pressing Plant, Indianapolis
    Published By – Famous Music Corporation
    Published By – Marvin Music Co.

 Credits: 
 
    Arranged By – Joe Reisman
    Producer – Joe Reisman
 
Barcode and Other Identifiers         
         
    Matrix / Runout (Side A Label): H2PW-8173
    Matrix / Runout (Side B Label): H2PW-7411
    Matrix / Runout (Side A): H2 PW8173--1S I A1
    Matrix / Runout (Side B): H2 PW7411-22S I A1
    Rights Society: ASCAP
    Pressing Plant ID: I

Perry Como With Mitchell Ayres Orch.* And The Ray Charles Singers – Magic Moments / Catch A Falling Star
Label:    RCA Victor – 47-7128
Format:    Vinyl, 7", 45 RPM, Single, Indianapolis Pressing
Country: US
Released: 1957
Genre: Pop
Style: Vocal
         
         
         
         
Viewfinder links:       
         
Bert Bacharach           
Perry Como             
Hal David         
Clint Eastwood              
Françoise Hardy           
Mrs. Miller           
Lee Pockriss             
Elvis Presley            
Paul Vance            
Lawrence Welk             
      
Net links:       
         
History ~ Catch A Falling Star         
         
Songfacts ~ Catch A Falling Star         
      
YouTube links:           
 
Adam & the Ants - Catch a Falling Star              
Perry Como ~
     Catch a Falling Star         
     Catch a Falling Star (stereo remix)              
     Hot Diggity     
     Moments To Remember       
     Round And Round         
Françoise Hardy ~ Catch a Falling Star         
Mrs. Miller ~ Catch a Falling Star            
André van Duin ~ Tranen in je ogen               
Lawrence Welk ~ Calcutta dance contest         
         
         
         

Styrous® ~ Thursday, March 14, 2024 






      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

April 4, 2021

Hal David articles/mentions

  ~       
      
     
mentions:     
Dionne Warwick ~    
    Go With Love            




      
     
      
Hal David     
date & photographer unknown     
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

September 12, 2020

20,000 vinyl LPs 239: On Her Majesty's Secret Service ~ James & Diana

~       
vinyl LP front cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®


My two favorite actors who portrayed the British spy, James Bond, were  Sean Connery and Daniel Craig. However, my favorite Bond film was On Her Majesty's Secret Service which had neither of them. The James Bond (George Lazenby) love interest in this film was Diana Rigg, an English stage and screen actress whose notable roles were as Emma Peel in the TV series The Avengers and as Olenna Tyrell in Game of Thrones (link below).       

I am partial to the film On Her Majesty's Secret Service for a couple of reasons; Rigg was the ONLY Bond woman to actually marry the British spy and the love theme from the film was incredibly beautiful (I'm always a sucker for a pretty tune) (link below). Her Majesty is also considered by many the best of the Bond films (links below).    


vinyl LP front cover 
art work by Bob McGinnis
photo by Styrous®


The illustration on the album cover was created by Bob McGinnis who also did the artwork for another Bond film, Thunderball


a
vinyl LP front cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®


The love theme, We Have All the Time in the World was composed by John Barry with bittersweet lyrics by Hal David and sung by Louis Armstrong




Armstrong was too ill to play his trumpet, therefore it was played by another musician but I can't find out who it was. It was Armstrong's last recorded song (he died of a heart attack two years later), and at the time of release it barely made an impact on the charts.         


Lyrics:

We have all, the time in the world
Time enough for life, to unfold
All the precious things
Love has in store
We have all the love in the world
If that's all we have, you will find
We need nothing more

Every step of the way
Will find us
With the cares of the world
Far behind us
We have all the time in the world
Just for love
Nothing more, nothing less, only love...

Every step of the way
Will find us
With the cares of the world
Far behind us, yes...

We have all the time in the world
Just for love, nothing more, nothing less, only love...

Only love...
   
The song title, We Have All the Time in the World, is taken from Bond's final words in both the novel and the film. Barry chose Armstrong because he felt he could "deliver the title line with irony." When asked for his favorite Bond composition, Barry cited both We Have All... and Goldfinger, sung by Shirley Bassey. Goldfinger because it perfected the "Bond Sound", and We Have All... because it was the finest piece of music he had written for a Bond movie and because of the pleasure of working with Armstrong. " How much time do we have?" :-)        

We Have All the Time in the World was covered by My Bloody Valentine (link below) an experimental rock, shoegazing band formed in Dublin in 1983; All the time had not been rediscovered yet as the classic it is now.   
        

vinyl LP back cover 
art work by Bob McGinnis
photo by Styrous®


The "James Bond" theme was written by Monty Norman and was used as the opening of two Bond films, Dr. No and On Her Majesty's Secrect Service, as well as several times in other Bond films. 
  

vinyl LP back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®


The score for the film was composed by Barry as well as the love song We Have All the Time in the World sung by Louis Armstrong, with lyrics by Hal David, who was regular lyricist for Burt Bacharach.     


vinyl LP back cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®


We Have All the Time . . . is often mistakenly referred to as the opening credits theme, when in fact the song is played within the film, during the Bond–Tracy courtship montage, bridging Draco's birthday party in Portugal and Bond's burglary of the Gebrüder Gumbold law office in Bern, Switzerland.           




Eon Productions, a British film production company, selected an unknown actor and model, George Lazenby, to play the part of James Bond. During the making of the film, Lazenby announced that he would play the role of Bond only once. He rescues a woman, Contessa Teresa "Tracy" di Vicenzo, portrayed by Diana Rigg.          





photographer unknown


In 1968, after Sean Connery had left the role of James Bond, producer Albert R. Broccoli met George Lazenby for the first time while they were getting their hair cut at the same barbershop. Broccoli offered Lazenby an audition. The position was consolidated when Lazenby accidentally punched a professional wrestler, who was acting as stunt coordinator, in the face, impressing Broccoli with his ability to display aggression. Director Peter R. Hunt later claimed:
"We wanted someone who oozed sexual assurance, and we think this fellow has that. Just wait til the women see him on screen ... I am not saying he is an actor. There is a great deal of difference between an actor and a film star. Didn't they find Gary Cooper when he was an electrician?       
By November 1969, and prior to the release of On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Lazenby said he no longer wished to play another James Bond role, saying, "The producers made me feel like I was mindless. They disregarded everything I suggested simply because I hadn't been in the film business like them for about a thousand years."    
        
His co-star Diana Rigg was among many who commented on this decision:
"The role made Sean Connery a millionaire. It made Sean Connery ... I truly don't know what's happening in George's mind so I can only speak of my reaction. I think it's a pretty foolish move. I think if he can bear to do an apprenticeship, which everybody in this business has to do – has to do – then he should do it quietly and with humility. Everybody has to do it. There are few instant successes in the film business. And the instant successes one usually associates with somebody who is willing to learn anyway." 
Rigg was also quoted as saying, "I can no longer cater for his obsession with himself. He is utterly, unbelievably ... bloody impossible".        
       
Ah, Love!
















                     
Tracklist:

Side 1:

A1 - We Have All The Time In The World, lyrics by Hal David, Vocals – Louis Armstrong - 3:08
A2 - This Never Happened To The Other Feller    - 4:25
A3 - Try - 3:24
A4 - Ski Chase - 2:52
A5 - Do You Know How Christmas Trees Are Grown?, lyrics by Hal David, Vocals – Nina* - 3:19

Side 2:

B1 - Main Theme "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" - 2:33
B2 - Journey To Blowfeld's Hideaway - 3:25
B3 - We Have All The Time In The World, lyrics by Hal David - 2:56
B4 - Over And Out - 2:40
B5 - Battle At Piz Gloria - 4:00
B6 - We Have All The Time In The World - James Bond Theme, Composed By [James Bond Theme] – Monty Norman, Lyrics By [We Have All The Time In The World] – Hal David - 4:32

Companies, etc.



Credits:

    Arranged By, Composed By, Conductor – John Barry
    Artwork [Uncredited] – Bob McGinnis
    Producer – Phil Ramone

Notes:

Label Variant
-Title split in two lines, "On Her Majesty's" "Secret Service"
-Track times are listed
-Different font and arrangement
-Does not have Phil Ramone production credit on labels
-Spelling of tracks A2 and B2 differ on cover
Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Matrix / Runout (Side 1 Etching): UAS-5204-A
    Matrix / Runout (Side 2 Etching): UAS-5204-B 

John Barry ‎– On Her Majesty's Secret Service (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Label: United Artists Records ‎– UAS 5204
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Stereo
Country: US
Released: 1969
Genre: Jazz, Stage & Screen
Style: Big Band, Easy Listening, Soundtrack


   
         
Viewfnder links:        
   
Louis Armstrong       
John Barry     
Shirley Bassey               
Sean Connery        
Gary Cooper        
Diana Rigg                
        
Net links:        
        
NY Times ~ 50 Years Later, This Bond Film Should Get Its Due (review)  
Roger & Ebert ~ On Her Majesty's Secret Service (review)       
Ultimate Classic Rock ~ 'Secret Service' Tells the Best Bond Story (review)     
        
YouTube links:        
    
Movies & documentarys:     
    
On Her Majesty's Secret Service ~ 
      Official Trailer (1969)   
      Opening (This never happened to the other fellow!)  (Movie clip)     
      Attacking Piz Gloria (Movie clip)                    
      Ending  (Movie clip)      Rigg, Lazenby & the controversy behind On Her Majesty's Secret Service    
Diana Rigg 2011 interview: Garlic and George Lazenby     
        
Music:        
        
Louis Armstrong ~ We Have All the Time in the World        
John Berry ~   
    James Bond Theme         
    On Her Majesty's Secret Service Opening Theme Song     
My Bloody Vanentine ~ We Have All the Time in the World           
The Specials ~ We Have All the Time in the World          
The Ten Tenors ~ We Have All the Time in the World          
        
         
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Saturday, September 12, 2020       
       


















August 31, 2014

101 Reel-to-Reel Tapes 73: Go With Love (Dionne Warwick Sings The Songs Of Burt Bacharach And Hal David)

Dionne Warwick ~ Go With Love
Album cover detail
detail photo by Styrous©



In addition to my vinyl LP record collection I'm selling, I have hundreds of reel-to-reel, pre-recorded tapes as well. This is an entry about one of them that is for sale on Amazon (see link below). Interested? Contact me by email, please, not by a comment.

~ ~ ~

Of the many brilliant collaborations that have been formed, one of the most brilliant was that of Dionne Warwick, Burt Bacharach and Hal David. David wrote the lyrics, Bacharach wrote the music and Warwick delivered the finished package with elegance, style and beauty. The songs created by this trio, What The World Needs Now Is Love, Walk On By, Go With Love and Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head, for starters, are classics that have survived for 50 years. Yeah, believe it or not, they were written almost 50 years ago. My how time flies when you're having fun!



 
 Dionne Warwick ~ Go With Love
reel-to-reel album cover
photo by Styrous©



I remember listening to the songs she sang and in particular, I loved the beautiful lilt of her voice as she gently expounded on, What the World Needs Now Is Love. The song was originally recorded by Jackie DeShannon in 1965 after it had been turned down by Warwick. I was cognizant of the strife going on in the world at the time Warwick recorded her cover (1970) and thinking she was dead on right . . .



 


. . . in San Francisco, a homemade bomb, placed outside the police Park Station on Waller St., exploded. At first the Black Panthers were suspected but a later investigation suggested it was the work of the Weather Underground. The Vietnamese War raged on; the U. S. invaded Cambodia and storms of protest erupted throughout the nation, in particular, Kent State University. Thousands of people died in a 7+ earthquake in Peru. The Zodiac Killer terrorized San Francisco. There was a shootout in the parking lot of the Marin Civic Center; Angela Davis was involved. A gigantic cyclone killed hundreds of thousands in Bangladesh; a year later, in 1971, ex-Beatle George Harrison organized The Concert for Bangladesh. Even Canada had it's problems as well with bombings and killings by the Quebec Liberation Front. Ronald Reagan won his second term as governor. Yukio Mishima committed ritual suicide by Hara-kiri as an act of protest; Philip Glass would write a stunning score for the film of his life, Mishima. Jimi Hendrix died in London and Janice Joplin in Hollywood, both of a drug overdose. Sculptor Benny Bufano also died that year; I'd idolized his work since I was a little kid (especially his huge mural in Moor's Cafeteria on Powell Street). It was the year I quit my last real job to work for myself (then I needed all the love I could get). Yep, it seemed like the world was going mad, so, Marvin Gaye asked, What’s Going On? and on November 11, Stevie Wonder prayed, Heaven Help Us All, on the Johnny Cash TV show before the song was released in 1971 the following year. 



Dionne Warwick ~ Go With Love
reel-to-reel album cover back
photo by Styrous©



It wasn't a completely bad year, no year ever is; as in the song, Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head, from the 1969 film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, she gave us some hope. B. J. Thomas originally sang the song and it was his #1 hit. Before him, both Ray Stevens and Bob Dylan turned it down. 

The gentle song, which opens with a quiet banjo, is a paean to an optimistic attitude of mind based on an expectation of positive outcomes related to events and circumstances in one's life or the world at large. Oh, my goodness!!!

The single by Thomas reached #1 on charts in the United States, Canada, Norway and reached #38 in the UK Singles Chart. It topped the Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks in January 1970 and was also the first American number-one hit of the 1970s. The song also spent seven weeks on the Billboard adult contemporary chart. In 2008, the single was ranked 85th on Billboard's Hot 100 All-Time Top Songs and placed 95th in the 55th Anniversary edition of the All-Time Hot 100 list in 2013. Billboard Magazine also ranked the song 15th on its Top 50 Movie Songs Of All Time list in 2014.




Dionne Warwick ~ Go With Love
reel-to-reel album back detail
detail photo by Styrous©



One of the great vocalists of all time, Dionne Warwick was born Marie Dionne Warrick on December 12, 1940, in East Orange, New Jersey. In November 1962, Scepter Records released her first solo single, Don't Make Me Over, the title (according to the A&E Biography of Dionne Warwick) Warwick supplied herself when she snapped the phrase at producers Burt Bacharach and Hal David in anger. Warwick had found out that Make It Easy on Yourself — a song on which she had recorded the original demo and had wanted to be her first single release — had been given to another artist, Jerry Butler. From the phrase "don't make me over", Bacharach and David created their first top 40 pop hit (#21) and a top 5 U.S. R&B hit. Warrick's name was misspelled on the single's label, and she began using the new spelling (i.e., "Warwick") both professionally and personally.




Dionne Warwick ~ Go With Lovereel-to-reel tape
photo by Styrous©



Warwick ranks among the 40 biggest hit makers of the entire rock era, based on the Billboard Hot 100 Pop Singles Charts. Dionne Warwick is second only to Aretha Franklin as the most-charted female vocalist of all time with 56 of Dionne's singles making the Billboard Hot 100 between 1962 and 1998. 

She was named the Bestselling Female Vocalist in the Cash Box Magazine Poll in 1964, with six chart hits in that year. Cash Box named her the Top Female Vocalist in 1969, 1970 and 1971. In the 1967 Cash Box Poll, she was second to Petula Clark, and in 1968's poll second to Aretha Franklin. Playboy's influential Music Poll of 1970 named her the Top Female Vocalist.

Warwick is an actress and TV-show host, who became a United Nations Global Ambassador for the Food and Agriculture Organization, and a United States Ambassador of Health.




Dionne Warwick   ~ Go With Love
reel-to-reel tape label detail
detail photo by Styrous©


Label: Columbia ‎– DT2 5526
Series: Columbia Musical Treasuries –

Country: US
Released: 1970
Genre: Funk / Soul
Style: Soul

Tracklist:

Side 1:

1 - What The World Needs Now Is Love    
2 - Walk On By    
3 - The Beginning Of Loneliness    
4 - Long Day, Short Night    
5 - They Long To Be Close To You    
6 - Another Night    
7 - Don't Go Breaking My Heart    
8 - How Can I Hurt You    
9 - Are You There With Another Girl?    
10 - Let Me Be Lonely    
11 - Window Wishing    
12 - Here Where There Is Love    

Side 2:


1 - Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head    
2 - Go With Love    
3 - Looking With My Eyes    
4 - If I Ever Make You Cry    
5 - Walkin' Backwards Down The Road    
6 - How Many Days Of Sadness    
7 - Windows Of The World    
8 - As Long As There's An Apple Tree    
9 - In Between The Heartaches    
10 - Walk Little Dolly    
11 - Is There Another Way To Love You    





Links to music on YouTube:
Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head   
Philip Glass - Mishima  (NOTE: it has a VERY quiet intro & takes a few seconds to build)



Dionne Warwick ~ Go With Love reel-to-reel tape is for sale on Amazon 

reel-to-reel tapes on eBay



"The blues they send to meet me won't defeat me
It won't be long till happiness steps up to greet me"
 -  Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head