Bobby Darin: That's All (Atco 33-104, March 1959)
CD Release: Atlantic 82627, 6/24/1994
Recording Dates: December 19, 22, 24, 1958, NYC
Producers: Ahmet Ertegun, Nesuhi Ertegun, Jerry Wexler
Engineers: Tom Dowd, Carl Lustig, Herb Kaplan, Heinz Kubicka
Arrangements: Richard Wess
Musicians: Richard Wess (cond)
DEC 19-Joe Cabot, Jimmy Nottingham, Bernie Privin, Doc Severinsen (tp); Morton Bullman, Harry DiVito, Bob McGarity, Frank Rehak (tb); George Berg, Romeo Penque, Jerome Richardson, Jerry Sanfino, Joe Soldo (reeds); Hank Jones (p); Al Caiola (g); Eddie Safranski (b); Don Lamond (d); Phil Kraus, Terry Snyder (per).
DEC 22-George Berg, Romeo Penque (reeds); Isadore Zir (vla); Maurice Brown, Henry Pakaln (cello); Morris Stonzek (cello?); Moe Wechsler (p, cello); Mundell Lowe (g); Eddie Safranski (b); Bobby Rosengarden (d); unidentified 12 violins.
DEC 24-Joe Cabot, Mel Davis, Al DeRisi, Doc Severinsen (tp); Billy Byers, Cutty Cutshall, Frank Rehak, Chauncey Welsch (tb); Leon Cohen, Walt Levinsky, Seldon Powell, Jerry Sanfino (reeds); Moe Wechsler (p); Mundell Lowe (g); Eddie Safranski (b); Don Lamond (d); unidentified 8 strings.
Original LP Sequence:
Side 1:
Mack the Knife (Kurt Weill/Bertolt Brecht/Marc Blitzstein) (December 19)
Beyond the Sea (Charles Trenet/Jack Lawrence) (December 24)
Through a Long and Sleepless Night (Alfred Newman/Mack Gordon) (December 22)
Softly As in a Morning Sunrise (Oscar Hammerstein/Sigmund Romberg) (December 19)
She Needs Me (Arthur Hamilton) (December 22)
It Ain't Necessarily So (George Gershwin/Ira Gershwin) (December 24)
Side 2:
I'll Remember April (Gene DePaul/Don Raye/Pat Johnson) (December 24)
That's the Way Love Is (Bobby Darin) (December 19)
Was There a Call For Me (Woody Harris/Marty Holmes) (December 22)
Some of These Days (Shelton Brooks) (December 24)
Where Is the One (Edwin Finckel/Alec Wilder) (December 22)
That's All (Bob Haymes/Alan Brandt) (December 19)
Comments: Bobby Darin was a visionary. After the chart-topping success of "Splish Splash", he longed to make a record of standards. His label refused to finance it, so in 1959 he took his own profits from "Splash" and paid for the recording session himself. The result? He became the first artist in history to make a successful transition from rock n' roll to standards. "That's All" is a testament to the dynamic duo of Darin and arranger/conductor Richard Wess. Together they produced a record that generated two hit singles ("Mack the Knife" and "Beyond the Sea") and proved that Darin had the pipes and the sensiblities to be a legendary crooner.
Thursday, August 23, 2007
Bobby Darin CD Profile: That’s All
Posted by Michael at 3:38 PM
Labels: 1959, Ahmet Ertegun, Album, Atco, Atlantic, Beyond the Sea, Bobby Darin, bobbydarin, CD, Jerry Wexler, LP, Mack the Knife, Nesuhi Ertegun, Review, Richard Wess, That's All, Tom Dowd
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