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The Year of Tony Bennett

An Appreciation of the Art and Music of Tony Bennett

January 23, 2017 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: You Took Advantage Of Me

The song of the day for Tuesday, January 24, 2017 is “You Took Advantage Of Me.”

About This Song

Today we feature great Rodgers and Hart song from 1928, “You Took Advantage Of Me.” The song was written for the musical Present Arms. The song quickly found itself a popular standard and has been recorded many times, including those by Bing Crosby with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra, Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli, Anita O’Day, Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday.

About This Version

Tony Bennett recorded this version of “You Took Advantage Of Me” in 1973 for his second album of Rodgers and Hart songs, Tony Bennett Sings More Great Rodgers and Hart, released on Bennett’s own Improv label. His two Rodgers and Hart albums featured an unusual but incredibly effective quartet of musicians: George Barnes and Wayne Wright on guitar, Ruby Braff on cornet and John Guiffrida on bass. No piano and no drums, but the recordings are really sublime.

You Took Advantage Of Me

Listen to You Took Advantage Of Me on Spotify. Song · Tony Bennett · 2004


“You Took Advantage Of Me,” as well as The Complete Improv Recordings, is available from iTunes.

About The Secret Theme

Well, we’ve reached the end of the “secret theme” for January and no one guessed (or, more likely, guessed but decided not to mention it). The so-called secret was playing songs in alphabetical order by title, one song for each letter of the alphabet, though we did have to skip X and Z. Next month will feature the first entry for our theme of the year, Tony Bennett’s great collaborators. I think it’s going to be a lot of fun!

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: George Barnes, John Guiffrida, Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers, Ruby Braff, The Complete Improv Recordings, Tony Bennett, Tony Bennett Sings More Great Rodgers & Hart, Wayne Wright

July 1, 2016 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: The Lady Is Tramp

The song of the day for Saturday, July 2, 2016 is “The Lady Is Tramp.”

About This Song

Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart wrote “The Lady Is A Tramp” for the Broadway musical Babes In Arms, where it was introduced by Mitzi Green. The song was meant as a spoof on the high society of New York, where the singer is clear about what she likes to do, no matter what everyone else is doing. “The Lady Is A Tramp” has been sung by Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald and Lena Horne. More recently, Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga sang a duet of this song on their 2011 album “Duets II.”

About This Version

Today’s version of “The Lady Is A Tramp” was recorded in 1973 for the album Tony Bennett Sings 10 Rodgers & Hart Songs, released in 1975 on Bennett’s own Improv label. Accompanying Bennett on this album is the The Ruby Braff-George Barnes Quartet, featuring Braff on cornet, Barnes on guitar, Wayne Wright on guitar and John Guiffrida on bass. This quartet, with no piano or drums, is absolutely sublime for this body of Rodgers and Hart recordings.

The Lady Is A Tramp

Listen to The Lady Is A Tramp on Spotify. Song · Tony Bennett · 2004


“The Lady Is Tramp,” as well as The Complete Improv Recordings, is available from iTunes.

About Today

It’s Saturday and our video today is the great duet of “The Lady Is A Tramp” with Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, from 2011. This version of our song of the day is by Marion Evans.

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: Babes in Arms, George Barnes, John Guiffrida, Lorenz Hart, Marion Evans, Richard Rodgers, Ruby Braff, Tony Bennett Sings 10 Rodgers & Hart Songs, Wayne Wright

May 2, 2016 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: I Could Write A Book

The song of the day for Monday, May 2, 2016 is “I Could Write A Book.”

About This Song

Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart wrote “I Could Write A Book” for the 1940 Broadway musical Pal Joey. This has always been an interesting song. Today it’s considered a lovely romantic number, but in the context of the musical, it’s sung as a phony love song in order to woo the innocent ingenue. It’s been widely recorded by artists including Frank Sinatra, Rosemary Clooney, Betty Carter, Anita O’Day and Ella Fitzgerald.

About This Version

Tony Bennett recorded “I Could Write A Book” in 1976 for Tony Bennett Sings 10 Rodgers and Hart Songs. The lovely accompaniment is from the Ruby Braff-George Barnes Quartet, which featured Braff on cornet, Barnes and Wayne Wright on guitar and John Guiffrida on bass. It’s a lovely sound.

I Could Write A Book

Listen to I Could Write A Book on Spotify. Song · Tony Bennett · 2004


“I Could Write A Book,” as well as The Complete Improv Recordings, is available from iTunes.

About Today

We’re featuring “I Could Write A Book” to celebrate the 121st anniversary of the birth of the lyricist of the song, Lorenz Hart.

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: George Barnes, Happy Birthday Lorenz Hart, John Guiffrida, Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers, Ruby Braff, Tony Bennett Sings 10 Rodgers & Hart Songs, Wayne Wright

October 6, 2015 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: Blue Moon

The song of the day for Tuesday, October 6, 2015 is “Blue Moon.”

About This Song

“Blue Moon” was written by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart in 1933. The tune first was used in the 1934 film Manhattan Melodrama, though with a completely different lyric. It has gone on to be one of the great jazz standards, ranking #94 on the Jazz Standards website. The song was recorded by many of the great artists of the 1930s, including Benny Goodman and Ray Noble. It has remained popular up to now and is regularly sung by jazz and cabaret vocalists.

About This Version

Tony Bennett recorded today’s version of “Blue Moon” in July 1973 at the CBS 30th Street Studios on his own label, Improv, founded after Bennett left Columbia. It was initially released on Tony Bennett Sings 10 Rodgers & Hart Songs. Other songs recorded over the two day long session were released on Tony Bennett Sings More Great Rodgers & Hart. The songs from both albums, as well as alternate versions of many of the songs, is collected on The Complete Improv Recordings, which is available from iTunes and on CD from Amazon. The liner notes for the CD set is wonderful.

For these two albums, Bennett was backed by the Ruby Braff – George Barnes Quartet, featuring Braff on cornet, Barnes and Wayne Wright on guitar and John Guiffrida on bass. No piano and no drums. And completely brilliant. Not only does the sound of the quartet beautifully evoke the sound of the 1930s, the Quartet and Bennett are perfect together. After the pretty rough last months at Columbia, these songs are pure perfection. There’s a wonderful lightness in his voice that I dearly love–when he dances just over the tune. I believe these recordings to be some of Tony Bennett’s finest work.

Blue Moon

Listen to Blue Moon on Spotify. Song · Tony Bennett · 2004


“Blue Moon,” as well as The Complete Improv Recordings, is available from iTunes.

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: 1973, George Barnes, John Guiffrida, Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers, Ruby Braff, Wayne Wright

June 1, 2015 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Album of the Month: Tony Bennett: The Rodgers and Hart Songbook

The Album of the Month for June 2015 is Tony Bennett: The Rodgers and Hart Songbook.

RH-Songbook

This month’s album is actually two albums in one: Tony Bennett Sings 10 Rodgers & Hart Songs and Tony Bennett Sings … More Great Rodgers & Hart. Both of these albums were released in 1973 on Bennett’s own Improv label, which he created after leaving Columbia and a brief relationship with Verve/MGM. The two original Rodgers and Hart albums were re-mastered and released on a single CD in 2005 as Tony Bennett Sings The Rodgers and Hart Songbook. This album is available for purchase from Amazon.com.

These recordings featured the Ruby Braff/George Barnes Quartet, with Braff on trumpet, Barnes on guitar, Wayne Wright on guitar and John Burr on bass.

Mr. Bennett describes how this project came together his autobiography The Good Life:

My main focus in l ate 1973 became the brilliant trumpet playing of Rudy Braff. I’d known Ruby since 1951 when I first played in Chicago. Ruby heard George Barnes and Bucky Pizzarelli playing at the St. Regis Hotel in New York, and he sat in with the two guitarists. He loved the way that combination sounded, and suggested to George that they start a group. The gradually worked out a lineup of two guitars, a trumpet, and a bass. When I heard about this group, I had to check them out. I though they were great, and Ruby said to me, “Why don’t you come and sing a couple of tunes with us, and relax for a while, you know?” I was singing almost exclusively with big bands then, and even with a good sound system, I always had to belt it out to be heard above the music.

I liked the groove I got into with this intimate group so much that I did two special concerts with them at Alice Tully Hall in New York. Ruby and George and played the first half instrumentally, and then I came out in the second half and sang with them–two entire evenings of Rodgers and Hart. Two weeks later I recorded twenty-four Rodgers and Hart songs with Ruby and George, with Frank Laico as engineer. It was later released as Tony Bennett: The Rodger and Hart Songbook.

I am a huge fan of these two albums. I adore the sound from the quartet and Tony Bennett as much I adore the music of Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart–which is quite a lot. Everytime I listen, I am so taken at how perfect this group with Bennett is for these songs … all without a piano or drums.

I am currently reading a wonderful book by Dominic Symonds: We’ll Have Manhattan: The Early Work of Rodgers & Hart. This book was published in 2015 by The Oxford University Press (ISBN 978-0-19-992948-1) as part of The Broadway Legacies Series. I’ll be sharing thoughts from this author and others on the work of Rodgers and Hart over the month. This book is available from Amazon.com.

Filed Under: Album of the Month Tagged With: George Barnes, John Burr, Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers, Ruby Braff, Tony Bennett Sings 10 Rodgers & Hart Songs, Tony Bennett Sings More Great Rodgers & Hart, Wayne Wright

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