Since September 2010, this blog has recorded the journey of this music junkie as I attempt to listen to all the music in my CD collection. CDs revisited in their entirety from start to finish - no skipping tracks, no shuffle. Compact Discs only - no vinyl, no tapes, no files.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Barry Manilow - The Greatest Songs Of The Sixties (2006)


"What do you get when you mesh Barry Manilow with an inspired set of retro songs perfectly suited for 50-year-old women? Massive nirvana." - Billboard, October 28, 2006, p. 80
Manilow and Rod Stewart successfully turned this sort of recording into a recognized late-career strategy. Since The Greatest Songs Of The Fifties hit #1, you can bet there was a sequel (and two more sequels following this one, but we won't get to those). It's more of the same, but with worse arrangements. One of those cover albums that leaves you longing to hear the originals. I'll just put this one back on the shelf and move on.

Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: #2

Tracks:

SongYear
1Can't Take My Eyes Off You1967
2Cherish/Windy 1966/7
3Can't Help Falling In Love1962
4There's A Kind Of Hush 1967
5Blue Velvet1963
6Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head 1969
7And I Love Her1964
8This Guy's In Love With You 1968
9Everybody Loves Somebody1964
10You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' 1965
11When I Fall In Love1962
12Strangers In The Night 1966
13What The World Needs Now Is Love1965

I can't knock the song selection, particularly the inclusion of three classics by Bacharach/David. Track 12, Strangers In The Night, was previously released on the 1998 album, Manilow Sings Sinatra.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None

Previously revisited for the blog:
The Greatest Songs Of The Fifties (2006)Barry (1980)
Ultimate Manilow (2002)One Voice (1979)
Here At The Mayflower (2001)Greatest Hits (1978)
Summer of '78 (1996)Even Now (1978)
If I Should Love Again (1981)Tryin' To Get The Feeling (1975)

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Barry Manilow - The Greatest Songs Of The Fifties (2006)


It's a landmark day here at blog headquarters because this is the first time I've written about a DualDisc. This is also the only DualDisc currently in my collection; I inherited it from my father. I recently read a piece that collectively labelled formats such as DualDisc, SACD, DVD Audio, CD+G, CD Video, etc. as "legacy music discs" and I think I will adopt that terminology.

2004-2009

It makes sense Dad might want to try out this particular album as the 1950s were his decade in high school (Class of 1955) and college ('59). I have no idea if he knew it was a DualDisc when he purchased it, however. The disc comes with a warning:
Welp, I've currently got no fewer than 10 machines about the house that play DVDs and/or CDs so we'll just have to take our chances, won't we?

Musically, this album sounds exactly as you would expect. Manilow singing over derivative, schmaltzy orchestral arrangements with an upward modulation or two at the end of the tracks. Manilow doesn't have the greatest voice, but he sure can sell a song. And people who grew up in the '50s bought the hell out of this album and apparently recommended it to their friends, so I'll just put this one back on the shelf and move on.

Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: #1 (Manilow's second #1 album, and his first since his 1977 live album)

Tracks (CD Audio Side) my top picks are checked.

SongYear
1Moments To Remember1955
2It's All In The Game 1958
3Unchained Melody1955
4Venus 1959
5It's Not For Me To Say1957
6Love Is A Many Splendored Thing 1955
7Rags To Riches1953
8Sincerely/Teach Me Tonight 1955
9Are You Lonesome Tonight?1959
10Young At Heart 1954
11All I Have To Do Is Dream1958
12What A Diff'rence A Day Made 1959
13Beyond The Sea1959

Two tracks placed on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart: Unchained Melody (#20) and Love Is A Many Splendored Thing (#32).

Tracks (DVD Side): The entire album in "enhanced stereo" (yes, I listened to all the audio tracks on each side) plus a 15 minute video of "exclusive behind-the-scenes footage," which is oddly unavailable on YouTube as of this writing. It is simply video footage of the recording sessions interspersed with interviews of Manilow and Clive Davis. If you haven't seen it, you haven't missed much.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None

Previously revisited for the blog:
Ultimate Manilow (2002)One Voice (1979)
Here At The Mayflower (2001)Greatest Hits (1978)
Summer of '78 (1996)Even Now (1978)
If I Should Love Again (1981)Tryin' To Get The Feeling (1975)
Barry (1980)

Monday, January 26, 2026

Return To Forever Featuring Chick Corea - No Mystery (1975)


German import

Generally regarded as Return To Forever's weakest (maybe I should say "least celebrated") album, this thing just kind of unevenly meanders with more of a jam band vibe than an album of composed tracks. Hummable melodies need not apply. I took a chance on a used CD and it didn't really pay off for me.

Nevertheless, the album won a Grammy in the category of Best Jazz Performance by a Group.

Reviews/ratings:
  • Billboard: "remains one of the best examples of how jazz and rock cross polinate [sic] into a modern pop band."
  • Record World: "[transcends] the limitations of categorical classification with musically innovative ingenuity and a collective flow"
  • CashBox: "The textures are moods delineated on these tracks are striking"
  • Stereo Review: "often swims about aimlessly in a sea of electronic gimmickry"
  • DownBeat (★★★½): "the overall presentation is less than I have come to expect from talents like Clarke and Corea"
  • The Rolling Stone Jazz & Blues Album Guide (1999): ★★
  • The Virgin Encyclopedia of Jazz (1999): ★★


Album chart peaks:
  • US Billboard 200: #39
  • Billboard Jazz: #7
  • CashBox: #35
  • Record World Jazz: #34

Tracks: I dig a few tracks, including Dayride and Sofistifunk. What was side two (tracks 6-9) is more of a prog-rock/jazz thing that I don't particularly care for.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None.

Previously revisited for the blog:
Return To Forever (1975)

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Stanley Turrentine - Rough 'N' Tumble (1966)


Turrentine and a star-studded band groove through some soul/pop/jazz tunes (mostly covers) with top-notch arrangements; however, I ultimately agree with what is written in The Penguin Guide to Jazz: "Very enjoyable, if scarcely any kind of classic." But sometimes "enjoyable" is just what I'm after.

Original liner notes by Ira Gitler.

Turrentine - tenor saxophone
Blue Mitchell - trumpet
James Spaulding - alto saxophone
Pepper Adams - baritone saxophone
Grant Green - guitar
McCoy Tyner - piano
Bob Cranshaw - bass
Mickey Roker - drums
Duke Pearson - arrangements

Reviews/ratings:
  • Record World: "beautiful sound on six groovy, commercially appealing tracks"
  • CashBox: "A powerhouse package"
  • DownBeat (★★): "not recommended for serious listening"
  • The Penguin Guide to Jazz (5th ed., 2000): ★★★
  • The Virgin Encyclopedia of Jazz (1999): ★★★


Album chart peaks:
  • US Billboard 200: #149
  • Billboard R&B: #20
  • Billboard Jazz: #12
  • Record World Jazz: #1

Tracks:
  1. And Satisfy - originally recorded by Nancy Wilson in 1964. Wilson's single release in 1964 "bubbled under" Billboard's Hot 100 at #106.
  2. What Could I Do Without You - written and recorded by Ray Charles in 1956. His single peaked at #5 on Billboard's R&B chart.
  3. Feeling Good - written by for the 1964 musical The Roar of the Greasepaint – The Smell of the Crowd. While the musical wasn't a big hit, this song has become a standard.
  4. Shake - written by Sam Cooke and recorded by him at the last recording session before his death. Posthumously, the song reached #7 on the Hot 100 and #2 on the R&B chart.
  5. Walk On By - most famously recorded by Dionne Warwick (#6 pop, #1 R&B, #7 AC). I was previously familiar with this cut from its inclusion on the stellar Blue Note compilation, Blue Bacharach.
  6. Baptismal - the premiere recording of this piece, written in the 1950s by trumpeter John Hines.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None

Previously revisited for the blog:
T Time (1995)
Ballads (1993)
The Best of Stanley Turrentine (1990)

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Various Artists - Buddha Lounge (2002)


UK import

The story about how I found this particular brand of ambient lounge music is available on a previous Buddha blog post so I won't go into again. However, if you need some innocuous background music at your next cocktail party, these discs might just fit the bill.

Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: Did not chart

Tracks:
CD1
Artist Title
1
Stereo MC's Fever (Steve Hillage Mix)
2
Talvin Singh Traveller
3
Fila Brazillia Nature Boy
4
The Cristophe Gaze Project Manana
5
Thievery Corporation Indra
6
4 Hero feat. Terry Collier The Days Of The Greys
7
Jazzanova Bohemian Sunset
8
Al-Pha-X First Transmission
9
Bebel Gilberto Samba De Bancao (4 Hero Mix)
10
Outside Blue Sky
11
Nitin Singh Indian Secret (Shankar Remix)
12
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan Mustt Mustt
13
Purple Nine Moodswings (Kharma Mix)
14
Herbalism Run Away
15
Dave Warrin, Julius Papp & Lisa Shaw Looking Up


CD2
Artist Title
1
Badmarsh & Shri Day By Day (Chris Coco Mix)
2
Gotan Project El Capitalismo Foraneo
3
Bob Holroyd Waking The Spirits (Loop Guru Extended Strawberry Mix)
4
Jonathan Maron Wish You Well
5
Nitin Sawheny Breathing Light
6
Roni Size Heroes (Kruders Long Bossa Mix)
7
Native American Dream Native American Dream
8
Illie Natalia Romanian Gypsy
9
Tribal Lord African Chill
10
Craig Armstrong Weather Storm
11
Sergio Ibizan Dawn (Chill Mix)
12
DJ Kermit Turkish Dawn
13
Eastern Awakening Eastern Awakening
14
Dust Stand By My Side


Personal Memory Associated with this CD: Another pic from my vacation in the French West Indies? Sure! Here's the tropical rainforest in Parc national de la Guadeloupe.

Previously revisited for the blog:
Buddha-Bar III (2001)

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Crackin' - Special Touch (1978)


The fourth and final studio album by the Californian group. The music blends funk, soul, jazz, and pop elements (think a more gospelish AWB or EWF) and it's hard to believe this music didn’t break through to the mainstream. I first discovered the group because of the vocals of Leslie Smith, and he certainly delivers the goods here. So dadgum smooth! Producer Michael Omartian definitely brought in some top talent to the sessions, including recognizable names such as Jay Graydon and Ernie Watts. I like Special Touch even better than the group's 1977 self-titled album and I like that one a lot.

Billboard, October 7, 1978, p. 82

Peak on the US Billboard Top 200 chart: Did not chart

Tracks: The lead track, Double Love, was released as a single, but I can't find any chart action for it. That one is a favorite, plus Heavenly Day, I Can't Wait Forever, On The Wing, and Don't Cha Love Me (the yachtiest cut on the album). But there's nothing here that you'd want to skip.

Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None

Previously revisited for the blog:
Crackin' (1977)

Monday, January 5, 2026

Various Artists - Rhapsody In Blue (1999)


Part of The Blue Series, issued by Blue Note Records.
The CD's subtitle gives you the gist of the thing: "Blue Note Plays the Music of George and Ira Gershwin." Mainly selected from recordings on the Capitol label during the 1950s, this compilation introduced me to several musicians with which I was previously unfamiliar, including Frank Rosolino, Bill Potts, and Bob Cooper.

Tracks, with my favorites indicated:

ArtistSongYear
1The Billy May OrchestraRhapsody In Blueca. 1968
2Bud Shank Prelude No. 21959
3The Bob Cooper OctetStrike Up The Band1955
4Chet Baker But Not For Me1955
5Frank RosolinoEmbraceable You1954
6Julie London They Can't Take That Away From Me1959
7Thelonious MonkNice Work If You Can Get It1947
8Bill Evans/Bob Brookmeyer I Got Rhythm1959
9Hank JonesSummertime1960
10The Bill Potts Big Band I Got Plenty O' Nuttin'1959
11Kenny BurrellThe Man I Love1958
12Jimmy Smith 'S Wonderful1957
13Nat King ColeBidin' My Time1963
14Coleman Hawkins Someone To Watch Over Me1945
15John LewisI Can't Get Started1956
16Nancy Wilson Do It Again1969
17Ike QuebecHow Long Has This Been Going On?1962
18Art Pepper Fascinating Rhythm1957


Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None, but here's a reminder that I put together an unofficial, possibly incomplete list of titles in the Blue Series. Available here: The Blue Series (1991-2002).

Previously revisited for the blog:
US releases
Blue Funk (2001) UK releases
Blue '70s (2000) Blue 'N' Soul (2001)
Latino Blue (2000) Blue Series Sampler (2001)
Blue Brazil (1999) Blue TV (2001)
Jump Blue (1999) Capitol Rare Vol 3 (1999)
Blue Boogie (1999) Blue 45s (1998)
Blue Valentines (1999) Blue York Blue York (1996)
Capitol Rare (1999) So Blue So Funky Vol 2 (1994)
Capitol Rare Vol 2 (1999) California Cool (1993)
Blue Bossa Vol 2 (1999) So Blue So Funky (1991)
Blue Bacharach (1999)
Midnight Blue (1999)
Blue Movies (1999)
Blue 'N' Groovy Vol 2 (1999)
Blue Break Beats Vol 3 (1996)
Blue Break Beats (1992)
Blue Beat (1991)
Blue Bossa (1991)