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The Year of Tony Bennett

An Appreciation of the Art and Music of Tony Bennett

July 2, 2012 By Suzanne 13 Comments

The Quartet

View image | gettyimages.com

The Year of Tony Bennett has seen Tony Bennett several times in concert, always with this quartet of gifted musicians who not only back up Mr. Bennett superbly, but are all exceptional artists in their own right.

Tom Adair (piano).

Gray Sargent (guitar). Gray Sargent has, to the best of our knowledge, played with Mr. Bennett longer than other members of the current quartet. Gray was a member of the Ralph Sharon Quartet (along with Clayton Cameron and Paul Langosch) and has played with Ruby Braff. He is a recognized jazz and swing guitarist. Tony often sings with only Gray accompanying him at his concerts and those songs are always quite lovely. You can sometimes find Gray’s album, Shades of Gray, from Amazon.

Marshall Wood (bass). Marshall Wood is a well-respected jazz bass player. He played with Gray Sargent on Shades of Gray and with Rudy Braff.

Harold Jones (drums). Count Basie’s Favorite Drummer. He’s The Year of Tony Bennett‘s favorite drummer too. A native of Richmond, Indiana, he has played with many of the 20th and 21st century’s finest jazz artists: Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Hoagy Carmichael, Oscar Peterson, Benny Goodman, Joe Williams, Ella Fitzgerald and Natalie Cole. He is a renowned drumming instructor as well. We recently enjoyed the new biography of Mr. Jones: Harold Jones: The Singer’s Drummer by Gil Jacobs, which is available on Amazon.

Filed Under: About His Collaborators Tagged With: Billy Stritch, Gray Sargent, Harold Jones, Marshall Wood, quartet

June 22, 2012 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

The Best Is Yet To Come

Mr. Bennett has recorded (to my knowledge) four different versions of this song.

Recorded on July 30, 1960. Orchestra conducted by Cy Coleman.
Released as a single; see The Columbia Singles, Vol 6
I Left My Heart in San Francisco 1962
Tony Bennett at Carnegie Hall 1962
With Ralph Sharon and His Orchestra
Recorded Live on June 9, 1962
Duets An American Classic 2006
Sung with Diana Krall. With Lee Musiker, Gray Sargent, Paul Langosch, and Harold Jones
Arranged and conducted by Jorge Calandrelli
iTunes Festival: London 2010 – EP  2010
With Lee Musiker, Gray Sargent, Marshall Wood, and Harold Jones

I am featuring The Best Is Yet To Come for several reasons: it’s a great song and I never tire of hearing it.

This song, as much as any other song in his catalog, shows a quality of Tony that draws so much love and adoration from his fans: his innate and glorious sense of optimism. When Tony sings this song, I truly believe, along with the rest of the audience, that the best is yet to come: the best of Tony’s singing, the best of myself, and the best of the world.

Some people in our cynical world may say that this kind of optimism is Pollyanna-like and not grounded in reality. The complete opposite is true. Only a man filled with love for everything around him can give us that knowledge that the best is indeed yet to come. Likely not all at once, certainly with challenges along the way, but I come away from this song believing in its truth and the truth and honesty of the man who sings it at every concert of his I’ve ever attended. I hope and pray that he never stops singing it, because it’s a message that more people need to hear.

So thank, Tony Bennett. Out of the tree of life, I just picked me a plum.

I’m hard pressed to pick my favorite version, but there is something quite magical about this performance in the 1962 Carnegie Hall concert, recorded with Ralph Sharon conducting the orchestra.  The other three are also quite wonderful. It’s great song, sung by a singer who seems to love singing it.

Click here to view a video of Tony singing this song at the Newport Jazz Festival in 2002. Many thanks to Wolfgang’s Vault.

The Best Is Yet To Come

Music: Cy Coleman
Lyrics: Carolyn Leigh

Out of the tree of life I just picked me a plum
You came along and everything’s started to hum
Still, it’s a real good bet, the best is yet to come

The best is yet to come and babe, won’t it be fine?
You think you’ve seen the sun, but you ain’t seen it shine

Wait till the warmup’s underway
Wait till our lips have met
And wait till you see that sunshine day
You ain’t seen nothing yet

The best is yet to come and babe, won’t it be fine?
The best is yet to come, come the day you’re mine

Come the day you’re mine
I’m gonna teach you to fly
We’ve only tasted the wine
We’re gonna drain the cup dry

Wait till your charms are right for these arms to surround
You think you’ve flown before, but  you ain’t left the ground

Wait till you’re locked in my embrace
Wait till I draw you near
Wait till you see that sunshine place
Ain’t nothing like it here

The best is yet to come and babe, won’t that be fine?
The best is yet to come, come the day you’re mine

Out of the tree of life I just picked me a plum …

Filed Under: Songs Tagged With: Carolyn Leigh, Cy Coleman, Gray Sargent, Harold Jones, Lee Musiker, Marshall Wood, Ralph Sharon, Wolfgang's Vault

June 18, 2012 By Suzanne 1 Comment

The Best $5.99 You’ll Ever Spend

If you are a fan of Mr. Bennett’s live performances, I recommend that you download the iTunes Festival: London 2010 EP set of six songs, performed live in London. These recordings do not (as yet) exist on any released album. They are, without a doubt, on the top of my favorite cuts of his. Included on the set is:

  • The Best Is Yet To Come
  • Maybe This Time
  • Sing You Sinners
  • Smile
  • Who Care (So Long As You Care For Me)
  • For Once In My Life

If you’re not already a fan of his live performances, well, you’re missing something wonderful. Again, try this set for $5.99.
Mr. Bennett is accompanied by Lee Musiker (piano), Gray Sargent (guitar), Marshall Wood (bass) and Harold Jones (drums). The quartet is wonderful–on this EP set as well as in the live performances I’ve seen.

This link will take to you the proper location in ITunes. If you already have this, consider gifting it to a friend.

Filed Under: Albums Tagged With: Gray Sargent, Harold Jones, iTunes, Lee Musiker, Marshall Wood, quartet, Tony Bennett

June 17, 2012 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

The Way You Look Tonight

Mr. Bennett has recorded (to my knowledge) three versions of this song. All vastly different from each other.

Long Ago and Far Away 1958 with Frank DeVol and his Orchestra
Recorded in 1997 with the Ralph Sharon Trio. Appears on Rarities, Outtakes and Other Delights, Vol. 2 and
Tony Bennett Sings the Ultimate American Songbook 2007
Duets II 2011
Sung with Faith Hill. With Lee Musiker, Gray Sargent, Marshall Wood, and Harold Jones
Arranged and conducted by Jorge Calandrelli

It’s no secret that I tend to prefer the  recordings by Mr. Bennett with a smaller group and that I often prefer the later recordings over the earlier recordings. Therefore, it’s no surprise that of these three versions, I most love the 1997 version where he’s accompanied by the Ralph Sharon Trio.

The original version and the Duets II version with Faith Hill are lovely, sweet and optimistic. Tony’s optimism is one of my favorite things about his singing. In both of these versions, I feel that these lovers will always be together and that they will always remember the way you look tonight.

In the 1997 version, there is a deep and profound sadness and this sweet and happy song is turned into a ballad.  This version makes me feel that the singer knows that the relationship may be ending and that this very moment and they way she looks tonight may be the last and and most important memory that he will have. It’s sad and moving and full of love. But love, as we know, isn’t always happy.

The Way You Look Tonight

Listen to The Way You Look Tonight on Spotify. Song · Tony Bennett · 2010

The Way You Look Tonight

This song was originally written for 1936’s Swing Time and was sung (beautifully) by Fred Astaire. It won the Academy Award for Best Original Song.

Music: Jerome Kern
Lyrics: Dorothy Fields

Some day, when I’m awfully low,
When the world is cold,
I will feel a glow just thinking of you
And the way you look tonight.

Oh but  you’re lovely, with your smile so warm
And your cheeks so soft,
There is nothing for me but to love you,
And the way you look tonight.

With each word your tenderness grows,
Tearing my fear apart
And that laugh that wrinkles your nose,
Touches my foolish heart.

Lovely, never, never change.
Keep that breathless charm.
Won’t you please arrange it ?
Cause I love you, just the way you look tonight.
Just the way you look tonight.

Filed Under: Songs Tagged With: Dorothy Fields, Frank DeVol, Gray Sargent, Harold Jones, Jerome Kern, Lee Musiker, Marshall Wood, Ralph Sharon Trio

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