Ian Raymond, His Chorus and Orchestra – Sounds Like Ray Conniff

Sleeve Notes:

Boulevard are proud to present an album by Ian Raymond, his chorus and orchestra in a tribute to the instantly identifiable sound of Ray Conniff, the tracks on this record are ideal for background music or dancing, and include the well known number Sweet Sue and a new Conniff style treatment of such favourites as Pennies From Heaven, Londonderry Air, On Top Of Old Smokey and One, Two, Button My Shoe. When you hear this album we are sure you will be delighted at the arrangements and will be looking forward to the next album.

© Art & Sound Ltd,1971

Ian Raymond, His Chorus and Orchestra - Sounds Like Ray Conniff

Label: Boulevard 4018

1971 1970s Covers

Soul Hits

Sleeve Notes:

Together on this album – the super soul sounds that have topped the charts around the world! The great hits of Stevie Wonder, Roberta Flack, Billy Paul, and other great soul artists are represented on this L.P. that pays tribute to their great talent. If you’ve got soul, then this is the record for you!

Soul Hits

Label: Stereo Gold Award MER 411

1976 1970s Covers

Pearl Bailey Sings For Adults Only

Sleeve Notes:

UP UNTIL NOW there have been two Pearl Baileys. A Pearl Bailey of the night clubs and a Pearl Bailey of recordings. It has been a schizophrenic performing existence.

The reason for the dual personality is Pearl’s attitude toward life. Within the confines of an intimate night club she was able to fashion in song a portrait of a girl who knew the facts of life but who inevitably got her facts all mixed up. In sketching this girl, Pearly Mae (as she is known to friends) threw in asides and bits of business to the delight of night club goers who don’t to have pictures drawn for them about the facts of life. It was in this respect that the night club Pearl Bailey and the recording Pearl Bailey had to part company.

The recording companies preferred to play their Pearl Bailey straight. That was the only way to get her recordings played on the air. “Stick to the script” was the order of the day so Pearl had to shelve the innuendo and double entendre that made her so popular with the night club crowds.

Now, for the first time, the night club performer and the recording performer have become one and the same person. This album is Pearl Bailey’s night club performance come to life on a record. That’s why it is labeled “For Adults Only” and that’s why it is restricted from air play. It’s a precaution that Roulette has taken to protect the innocent from her earthy wisdom.

Pearly Mae has been around and knows what life is all about and she’s completely uninhibited about letting every-one in on what she’s learned. That’s why the innocent and/or uninitiated must be kept away. There’s no telling what disastrous effect she could have on them.

There’s a certain disenchantment about the way she faces life that can only be appreciated by those who have been through a mill or two themselves. But despite this disenchantment she faces life with a sardonic humor and a hunger for more. She creates more than just a warm-hearted girl who has been done wrong. She’s a girl who doesn’t want to do right. There seems to be no fun in that; for her, anyway. She knows about the pitfalls of romance but makes no pretense of avoiding that road to destruction. She knows that it will probably end in disaster, and it usually does. But she’s not surprised, in fact she wonders why it took so long. And before she’s in the last chorus, you know she’s ready for another encounter with the opposite sex.

In someone else’s hands this woman would be a pitiful soap-opera creation. As etched by Pearl Bailey, the character is wise, winning and full of good humor. And the innocent must be kept away from those who find humor in living.

There have been songwriters, too, who’ve written about life to suit Pearly Mae’s wry indignation. The blending here of songs and stylist is perfect. Legalize My Name, of course is a Bailey natural, but so is I Wanna Get Married, Let’s Do It, She Had To Go And Lose It At The Astor and Flings. And for those who worship at the shrine of the late Lorenz ( Larry) Hart (& Richard Rodgers), she’s included the memorable Zip from “Pal Joey” and To Keep My Love Alive from “A Connecticut Yankee.” These and the others in the set are done in her inimitable night club manner. As evidenced here, as in the clubs, she is the complete mistress of timing and when a throwaway line comes to her mind, it is thrown in with no holds barred.

Although the night clubs give her the most freedom of expression, Pearl has made excursions into Broadway and Hollywood. In the theatre she’s appeared in “House of Flowers,” “St. Louis Woman,” “Arms and the Girl” and “Bless You All,” while her screen credits include “Carmen Jones” and “That Certain Feeling.”

This album, however, is the Pearl Bailey of the night club – with no minimum and no cover charge.

Pearl Bailey Sings For Adults Only

Label: Roulette R-25016
Cover Photo: Chuck Stewart

1959 1950s Covers

Della Reese – Della

Sleeve Notes:

We have always admired Della Reese’s singing and were enormously pleased when the opportunity came fur as to bring her to RCA. We began her RCA history with a single recording, Don’t You Know, that underlined her warm, lyrical quality in ballads. In preparing her first album for as we felt that new Della’s considerable capacities for swinging should be given freedom.

We decided on Neal Hefti as the arranger and conductor for these sessions because he has the range of experience and insight as well as the technical skills to provide exactly the right complement to Della’s style.

Our role as A&R men is to arrange marriages – between a song and an artist, between an artist and an arranger. We wanted to take special can with Della’s first RCA album, and accordingly we bad at least half a dozen conferences with Neal before he even began to write.

Della was on the West Coast during some of the preparatory sessions. We’d arrange for her to be in a studio with a piano, call her, discuss the tunes and arrangements, and she in turn would send us tapes of her ideas.

What resulted, therefore, was an album in which the framework for each song has a distinctive character – the best possible that we felt could be devised both for the song and for Della’s musical personality.

We want to make clear how much respect we have for Della’s talent. She’s young, has already accomplished so much, and has years to grow even more. We believe she will be one of the greats of show business, not just an artist with a few hits. In fact, we’ll go on record as saying that Della Reese will be among the top ten popular entertainers in the next decade.

Della’s career has been remarkably diversified. She was a member of the gospel group of the nonpareil Mahalia Jackson by the time she was thirteen and during her college years. Wayne University in Detroit, she formed her own gospel unit,”The Meditation Singers”.

Della began to branch out into blues and pop music at the Flame Club in Detroit. She gathered more experience with Erskine Hawkins, and, more recently, as an increasingly successful headline performer in clubs, theatres, and on radio and TV. She’s also been in films (Columbia’s Les Reek) and her reputation has become international.

We feel that now on RCA, Della Reese’s career will reach even more impressive levels. And we fully intend to select those songs and arrangers that will make it possible for the public to know all of Della Reese. She is unique in the popular field in that she can do so many things well. In this album you’ll hear how warm she can be and how fully she can swing.

We suggest you pay special note to the way she uses words. It’s very much like the way a musician uses an instrument. She bends, bites and projects the lyrics of a song in a way that no artist we know can do. We are delighted to have helped bring this album into being.

Hugu & Luigi

Label: RCA RD27167

1960 1960s Covers

Nancy Wilson – Today, Tomorrow, Forever

Sleeve Notes:

Through a succession of wonderful albums, Nancy Wilson has established herself as one of the finest singers of our day. So it has become natural that when good new songs come along, or old favorites become newly popular, people want to hear Nancy sing them in her own fresh, lilting, wonderful Wilson way.

This album contains some of the best and most beautiful of those songs: I Left My Heart in San Francisco, What Kind of Fool Am I?, and many more. Their tempos range from easy to bright to Latin, and Nancy sings them all without artifice, with deft and disarming simplicity, and makes them immediately her own – so much so that the listener gains a feeling of hearing them for the very first time.

And listen to Nancy’s Go Away Little Boy. She makes each word so meaningful that it’s almost as if she were speaking the lyric, To I Can’t Stop Loving You she brings a smoldering passion. And in every song, passionate or sweet, regardless of tempo, there is always the lilting freshness that is Nancy’s special and very wonderful trademark.

The backgrounds are tasteful scores that never get in the way of the singer, and they are played by a smaller group than Nancy has recently performed with on record. They are conducted by the gifted Kenny Dennis, whose wife, should you not already know, is Nancy Wilson. These are backgrounds that could be listened to separately for their own delightful qualities, were it possible to devote one’s full attention to any other sound with the sensational Miss Nancy Wilson front and center.

Produced by DAVID CAVANAUGH

Label: Capitol T2802

1964 1960s Covers

Eartha Kitt – That Bad Eartha

Sleeve Notes:

Actually the only person competent enough to write these program notes for Eartha Kitt would appear to he Mr. Roget – he of Roget’s Thesaurus – or perhaps Mr. Noah Webster. But even having all the words in the English language at one’s disposal is hardly a guarantee that the Kitt Story can be adequately told. She started out life on a desperately poor share-cropper’s farm in South Carolina and grew up in a miserable Harlem tenement house, helping to support herself and her aunt by working long hours as a seamstress in a uniform factory. In her early teens she discovered that she was endowed with an unusual talent for singing and dancing; and although, superficially, she seemed no different from the countless other poverty-stricken children in Harlem, she dreamed in the good old American tradition that she, Eartha Kitt, the unknown waif, would shoes them – that some day she would be a dazzling entertainer and the toast of continents.

And show them she did, to a degree which can be described with understatement as fantastic. At the age of sixteen she met, more or less by accident, the famous dancer Katherine Dunham, who tools one look at Eartha’s inspired, self-trained dancing, gave her a scholarship, and signed her for the next tour. In 1948, she performed in Mexico fort, then London, Paris and the continent. Finally, with typical Kitt initiative, she decided to go it alone in Paris, where her success was overwhelming.

Thus began the Eartha Kitt legend, and no press agent could have written such madly enthusiastic notices about any client as the effusions of praise which broke forth from her bedazzled audiences in Paris and subsequently Turkey, Egypt and Greece. A staid member of the Rouse of Lords shook his head and remarked in a dazed voice that she was “an arrangement designed to unhinge men’s minds”. Porfirio Rubirosa, renowned connoisseur of such matters, sighed and muttered that she was “fire in ice”, whatever that may mean exactly. Orson Welles made her Helen of Troy in his production of Faust and loudly proclaimed that she was “the most exciting woman in the world”! And the Maharajah of Cooch Behar summed up the Eartha-rized feelings of most mots when he “bayed” (in the words of a bemused writer) that he was “utterly destroyed” by this seething young enchantress!

This album gives some indication of Eartha’s vocal talents her dancing and acting, of course, would require special descriptions elsewhere. Here she offers interpretations, complete with the tantalizing and characteristic Kitt vibrato, of a dozen songs, each one different in mood from the others, and including selections in English, French, Spanish, Turkish and believe it or not in Swahili, one of the leading languages of East Africa! Whether it’s in the rhythmic malevolence of I Wool to Be Evil or in the reflective Lilac Wine, in the irresistibly scheming C’est si bon or in the tender African Lullaby, Eartha reveals that she is an interpreter of songs almost any kind of sang who can only lee called unique.
Notes by Duncan McDonald.

Label: RCA RD-27067

1956 1950s Covers

Mohammed El-Bakkar & His Oriental Ensemble – Music Of The African Arab Vol. 3

Here is music to titillate the emotions of those who love dangerous living (as all Arabs do), of people who consider fear of death a monstrous absurdity (as most Arabs do), of bold souls who believe in living life fully without concern over the future.
Mr Mohammed El-Bakkar was of Moroccan origin living the last few years of his short life in America where he produced several albums of “middle-eastern” music each of which sported a colourful and attractive cover. We have two of his album covers for your delight and amusement – this one and “Dances of Port Said

Sleeve Notes:

Visions of voluptuous dancing girls whose lithe bodies twist and turn like writhing serpents about to strike. Gruff, unshaven men hungry for the touch of a woman after lonely weeks spent in the desert under a maddening sun. . . . Secluded harems where the air is heavy with the aromas of perfume and incense and where luscious fruits are constant reminders of fertility . . exotic, crowded market places where lustful men stalk women swathed in Djelleba (head covering) and veils, their dark, flashing eyes a constant enticement to violate the mystery of the forbidden. . . High, arched gateways framing bullet-pocked courtyards where beautiful virgins were one sold in slavery.

These are visions of Arabian Africa. And no one is able to capture these visions through sound with as much authenticity and excitement as Mohammed El- Bakkar, leading tenor of the Orient and an outstanding conductor and interpreter of Middle Eastern music. Bakkar is on intimate terms with the practice, theory and intrigue of Islamic music. In this recording, as conductor and interpreter he succeeds in capturing the haunting flavour of Arabian vocal and instrumental music, particularly the special earthy quality to which all Arabs give expression.

Arabian music in its proper sense is the music of Bedouins in the desert and oases, of urban dwellers in the market places and other public areas, of entertainers in the cafes, the palaces, harems and theatres. Factually, the musical style known popularly as Arabian comprises much more than the music of Arabia proper, and even of nations whose people speak Arabic. It encompasses Morocco, West Africa, Algiers, the African borderland of the Mediterranean through Syria, Iraq, Turkey, Persia and even the northern part of India.

It is highly emotional music, limited in range and very free rhythmically, It generally starts with a low pitch, curves upward and returns. repeating this pattern again and again. The rising and falling pitch is typical of both vocal and instrumental music. Arabian music has an overall pattern of melody based freely on one of the modal scales and characterized by stereotyped turns, by a general mood and by pitch (low, middle or high). in which respect it is reminiscent of the Greek classifications of melodies. This pattern is known to orientals as Maqam, originally the name of the stage on which singers performed before the caliph. It is the exact counterpart of a similar pattern known in India as Raga. The most important thing about Islamic music is that it has not only a philosophical basis, but physiological elements as well. These represent actual physical sensations. Hearing the selections in this recording, one realizes that the pervading, persistent melodies evoke something of the mood of ecstasy and trance in the listener which prevails at gatherings of dervishes, ceremonial affairs, ritual dance performances and other festive occasions.

Islamic rhythm sterns from the meters of poetry, and rhythmic patterns appear in all melodies, both vocal and instrumental and especially in drum parts, which are almost as obligatory in Islamic music as they are in Indian music. Accents are generally given in timbre, rather than in force. Thus. drummers know things like muffled beats, called dum, and clear beats, known as tak: less muffled heats, called dim, and less clear beats, or tik. The clear timbre is usually reserved for the basic rhythmic pattern. while the muffled timbre is used for the muffled beats that mark the sections between the louder heats.

Polyphony is not as essential in Islamic music as it is in western music, It does exist, however, in three forms heterophony, drones and occasional consonances. The first is illustrated by what the western world generally calls an ensemble, that is, flutes. zithers, lutes, drums and sometimes strings; also, one or more singers. Drones are used in what is known as the taqsim an improvised prelude of solo instruments that often precedes the formal beginning of a composition. Consonances are mainly ornaments in which two consonant notes mingle on the same beat. These usually are large intervals like the octave or fourth.

The foregoing is by way of explaining some of the basic structure that shapes the music in this recording. But here all formality and pedantry ends. For the selections represented here are the expressions of the Islamic adventurer,. who expects life to have all the variety and flavour or A Thousand and One Nights. Here is music to titillate the emotions of those who love dangerous living (as all Arabs do), of people who consider fear of death a monstrous absurdity (as most Arabs do), of bold souls who believe in living life fully without concern over the future. The Arab does not put money in the bank when he gets hold of any, but rather in a place where he can easily get it and feel it – when he feels like doing so. He is fiercely independent, believing that aid comes only from Allah. He believes in letting fate take its course without worrying about where it will lead him, except when it comes to women. For his is a man’s world more completely than anywhere else on earth, and he is forever critical and intolerant of women.

Listening to the music here, one is reminded that the Arab is a man inextricably bound up in the pattern of civilization into which he was born. This cannot be described in so vulgar a fashion as “hoochie-koochie” music (as so many Americans are apt to describe Middle Eastern musk which they heir in movies). only because movies and other mass media of entertainment for most people have associated sin with the “hoochie-koochie” concept. The Arab does not look upon evil and good the way people of the western world do.

Here in this recording is a realistic musical portrait of Islamic expression, It is not by any means complete, nor is it intended to be. But in these selections are mirrored through music visions of veiled women, the passion of love translated into musical expression, the humorous interplay of the two sexes, and many subtleties of Arabian life and custom. All are part of the incredible Arabian world.

MOHAMMED EL-BAKKAR – an idol of Middle Easterners not only abroad, but throughout the United States. He was a featured star in the highly successful Broadway revue, “Fanny” for two years. which added to a lengthy list of outstanding achievements in the world of entertainment. Mohammed El-Bakkar has given command performances for former King Farouk of Egypt, for his successor, Maj. Gen. Mohammed Naguib, for King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia and the Shah of Persia. As actor, he has appeared in no less than 32 motion pictures which he himself produced and directed. He has numerous radio and television appearances to his credit. Bakkar went to the U.S. a few years ago for a sixth concert tour, and decided he liked it so much that he resolved to stay and become a citizen. He has filled engagements in major eastern cities and has been acclaimed enthusiastically everywhere. During leisure hours, when not giving a performance, he enjoys nothing more than entertaining Syrian, Lebanese, Turkish and Persian compatriots the world over.

Mohammed El-Bakkar & His Oriental Ensemble - Music Of The African Arab Vol. 3

Label: Audio Fidelity 155 036 FBY

1958 1950s Covers

Jimmy McGriff – Electric Funk

Sleeve Notes:

As old precepts and concepts about music come tumblin’ down as in the days when Joshua was doing his thing, a whole new spectrum of musical integration seems to be emerging from the dogmatic rubble. Take jazz, as it used to relate to the organ. At one time the organ was considered a dirty word among people who manufactured public opinion about “what was, or was not acceptable in a jazz combo, band or orchestra.” It was strictly a tool for rock and roll musicians to create a less than pure atmosphere of frenzy for a bunch of wildly undulating teeny-boppers. “Critics” are always right, aren’t they?

Now all this has changed drastically. For starters, rock has finally taken its rightful place among the genuine forms of music that have developed and evolved in our culture. Its roots have been traced further back than most people who are alive today can remember. It can be perceived in blues, gospel, folk music and, with increasing effectiveness, jazz. In addition, almost every instrument used in the current presentation or in the overall development of this mode of expression is considered “Acceptable” if it enhances the desired projection of a style or mood. Further, the gap between jazz and rock has been bridged to such an extent that they both can be found interwoven in the repertoire of many of the top record sellers of our day.

All of this prelude now brings us to Jimmy McGriff, one of the finest organists (jazz, rock or otherwise) in the vast community of modern musicians. For the last few years, his albums have been persistent testimony to individualism. His protean ability and nonrestricted approach to everything his musical taste favors have made it impossible to fit him within the boundaries of one category. He originates and then develops and in doing so presents a total picture of himself.

“Electric Funk” is the latest in the constantly evolving story of Jimmy McGriff. It’s a complete experience of thought and ability. Although the title connotes a purely upbeat rendering, “Funk” offers a mixture of tempo and feeling and in two cuts “Spear For Moon Dog” (Parts I & II) McGriff shows a great deal of musical compassion (Moon Dog is a blind man who can be found almost any day in New York City’s mid-town area dressed as a Viking and carrying a spear. He never begs money, he just listens to the world around him).

As previously stated, things have changed and the talent and incisiveness of one James Harrill McGriff stands out as one of the most convincing tributes to progress.
JEFF SMERIN (original liner notes)

Jimmy McGriff - Electric Funk

Listen to an organ with more funk than a funk filled arena on National Funk Day…

Label: Blue Note Records BST 84350

Art Production: Frank Gauna
Photography: Steve Wasserman
Redesign by Patrick Roques

1970 1970s Covers