Best of Me (Intro) - Barry Manilow, Foster, David [1]
Sweet Life [Live][#] - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
I Am Your Child [Live][#] - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Could It Be Magic - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Adrienne
Could It Be Magic - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Adrienne
Brandy - Barry Manilow, English, Scott
Mandy [Original First Take][#] - Barry Manilow, English, Scott
It's a Miracle - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Sandra [Live][#] - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Enoch
I Write the Songs - Barry Manilow, Johnston, Bruce
As Sure as I'm Standing Here - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Adrienne
New York City Rhythm - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Tryin' to Get the Feeling Again [Alternate Take][#] - Barry Manilow, Pomeranz, David
All the Time - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Ready to Take a Chance Again - Barry Manilow, Fox, Charles [1]
Somewhere in the Night - Barry Manilow, Jennings, Will
The Old Songs [Alternate Take][#] - Barry Manilow, Kaye, Buddy
I Don't Want to Walk Without You - Barry Manilow, Loesser, Frank
If I Should Love Again [Alternate Take][#] - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Track Listings (15) - Disc #2
Copacabana (At the Copa) [Home Cassette Recording] - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
Copacabana (At the Copa) - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
Dancin' Fool - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
I'm Your Man - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Hey Mambo - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
Big Fun - Barry Manilow, Arkin, Eddie
Riders to the Stars - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Adrienne
I Wanna Be Somebody's Baby [#][Outtake] - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Enoch
Daybreak - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Adrienne
Even Now [Live][#] - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Life Will Go On [Live][#] - Barry Manilow, Bettis, John
Memory - Barry Manilow, Eliot, T.S.
Ships - Barry Manilow, Hunter, Ian
If I Can Dream - Barry Manilow, Brown, Walter Earl
One Voice - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Track Listings (18) - Disc #3
This One's for You [#][Demo Version] - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Lay Me Down - Barry Manilow, Weiss, Larry
Big City Blues - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Adrienne
Somewhere Down the Road [#][Demo Version] - Barry Manilow, Snow, Tom
A Little Travelling Music, Please - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
You Could Show Me - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
Ave Maria - Barry Manilow, Schubert, Franz [Vi
Look to the Rainbow [From Finian's Rainbow] - Barry Manilow, Harburg, E.Y.
Joey [#][Demo Version] - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Enoch
Please Don't Be Scared - Barry Manilow, Sterling, Mindy
Baby, It's Cold Outside - Barry Manilow, Loesser, Frank
When October Goes - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Ain't It a Shame - Barry Manilow, Anderson, Adrienne
Brooklyn Blues - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
How Do I Stop Loving You? [#][Demo Version] - Barry Manilow, Butler, Artie
Just Remember [Live][#] - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
I Can't Teach My Old Heart New Tricks - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Weekend in New England - Barry Manilow, Edelman, Randy
Track Listings (18) - Disc #4
Give My Regards to Broadway [Live][#] - Barry Manilow, Cohan, George M.
Medley: Send in the Clowns/Looks Like We Made It [Live][#] - Barry Manilow, Jennings, Will
Can't Smile Without You [Alternate First Take][#] - Barry Manilow, Arnold, Chris [Prod
Beautiful Music - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Fugue for Tinhorns [From Guys and Dolls] - Barry Manilow, Loesser, Frank
Medley: My Girl/No One in This World [#][Outtake] - Barry Manilow, Manilow, Barry
Don't Talk to Me of Love - Barry Manilow, Lenoir
The Last Duet - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
Wild Places [#][Demo Version] - Barry Manilow, Browne, Duncan
Never Met a Man I Didn't Like [From the Will Rogers Follies] - Barry Manilow, Coleman, Cy
Who Needs to Dream - Barry Manilow, Butler, Artie
Read 'Em and Weep - Barry Manilow, Steinman, Jim
Let Freedom Ring [#][Outtake] - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
Let Me Be Your Wings - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
If Tomorrow Never Comes - Barry Manilow, Blazy, Kent
Another Life - Barry Manilow, Hill, Andy
I Made It Through the Rain [Alternate Take][#] - Barry Manilow, Feldman, Jack
The Best of Me - Barry Manilow, Foster, David [1]
Track Listings (1) - Disc #5
Chapel of Love [DVD] - Barry Manilow,
The story Barry Manilow, his friends and associates tell in the liner notes to his four-CD/one-VHS box set retrospective The Complete Collection And Then Some... is about a contemporary pop songwriter who is reluctantly tr... more »ansformed into an interpretive singer; becomes an easy-listening, commercial pop superstar to his surprise (and, to some extent, dismay); and, through travail, reclaims his original vision by writing and performing neo-classic pop with tinges of jazz and show music. The trouble with this story is that when you play the album, you still hear a lot of earnest, piano-based romantic ballads, the singer's own tunes virtually indistinguishable from those of others. David Martin, co-author of "Can't Smile Without You," frankly admits that he stole the song's title from a greeting card, but Manilow's own lyric collaborators don't dig much deeper. Manilow's real talents lie in arrangement -- he always puts in enough modulations, tempo shifts, and instrumental development to maintain interest -- and in his singing, which retains sincerity and some buoyancy despite the unrelieved plaintiveness of the melodies and lyrics.
Like other box sets assembled in the early '90s, The Complete Collection And Then Some... tipped the scales more toward unreleased material. There were a few newly recorded songs, and a few that had been left off Manilow's regular albums, but the bulk of the previously unreleased material consisted of live performances, demos, and alternate takes. Many of the big hits are only heard in alternate versions, meaning that this was aimed at Manilow fans for whom the original demo of "Mandy," on which the singer accidentally sang "Brandy" (the song's original title), was more valuable. The set also included an hour-long video, Barry Manilow Performances, Volume One: The Highlights, which employed footage from Manilow's television appearances of the 1970s and '80s. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide« less
The story Barry Manilow, his friends and associates tell in the liner notes to his four-CD/one-VHS box set retrospective The Complete Collection And Then Some... is about a contemporary pop songwriter who is reluctantly transformed into an interpretive singer; becomes an easy-listening, commercial pop superstar to his surprise (and, to some extent, dismay); and, through travail, reclaims his original vision by writing and performing neo-classic pop with tinges of jazz and show music. The trouble with this story is that when you play the album, you still hear a lot of earnest, piano-based romantic ballads, the singer's own tunes virtually indistinguishable from those of others. David Martin, co-author of "Can't Smile Without You," frankly admits that he stole the song's title from a greeting card, but Manilow's own lyric collaborators don't dig much deeper. Manilow's real talents lie in arrangement -- he always puts in enough modulations, tempo shifts, and instrumental development to maintain interest -- and in his singing, which retains sincerity and some buoyancy despite the unrelieved plaintiveness of the melodies and lyrics.
Like other box sets assembled in the early '90s, The Complete Collection And Then Some... tipped the scales more toward unreleased material. There were a few newly recorded songs, and a few that had been left off Manilow's regular albums, but the bulk of the previously unreleased material consisted of live performances, demos, and alternate takes. Many of the big hits are only heard in alternate versions, meaning that this was aimed at Manilow fans for whom the original demo of "Mandy," on which the singer accidentally sang "Brandy" (the song's original title), was more valuable. The set also included an hour-long video, Barry Manilow Performances, Volume One: The Highlights, which employed footage from Manilow's television appearances of the 1970s and '80s. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
Let it storm. I've got this collection to keep me warm
Kathy W | Baltimore | 10/09/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This 4-CD + 1-DVD + Book set is awesome! 70 arrangements of Barry s-s-s-s-o-o-o-ngs on CD and 12 more on DVD! (Sorry, I got so excited, I stuttered! Geeze! That's 82 songs!!! You can drive from here to Kookamonga with this set! By the way, you need a car, too.) I put the 4 CDs in the car the other day and took the 1 ½ hour trek up to Lancaster to shop. Had the CDs playing ALL DAY LONG, without a repeat. Went up to Lititz, Kissel Hill, and all around the cat's barn, dodging bad drivers on cell phones, and back home to Baltimore again. Had a great time with these Barry songs. This is a fantastic collection of so many great songs, even if you already have many other Manilow CDs.
There are many Barry classics and many Barry songs only found on a limited number of CDs, and some I haven't even heard before. Some of the classics or semi-classics are just a wee bit different from other arrangements on other Barry CDs.
This is the only place I've found "Ave Maria." It's on Disc 3--absolutely beautiful--sung in both English and Latin. I also found a combo of "My Girl/No One in This World" on Disc 4, that is so very pretty. "How Do I Stop Loving You" is also another beauty on Disc 3.
On Disc 2, "I'm Your Man" always makes me wanna dance, and depending on where I am, I do just that! This version is extended, all the better to dance with, my dear. "Hey Mambo, Riders to the Stars, Beautiful Music," rev me up to do battle with the negative-ites of the world. "Memory" and "If I Can Dream" are beauties also found on Disc 2.
Disc 4 has "Let Freedom Ring," a patriotic song from 1991, also found on the "2 Nights Live" set. "If Tomorrow Never Comes" is a Garth Brooks Country Western song and is such a gorgeous song (If I don't wake up in the morning, would she know how much I love her?) I would have cried when I heard it, but I'm tuff (nah-try stay puft marshmello)!
I recently read a comment Barry wrote about "I Write the Songs," and Hey, I get it! I thought the song was beautiful before, but now, WOW! He basically said that the lyric's writer was referring to the Spirit of music as writing the songs (through a person), rather than a person writing them. Listen to this song in that perspective. It gives it very special meaning. You'll also hear reference to Spirit in "Daybreak".
Got some broadway musical songs here, too, on Disc 4 that are great and are also on "Showstoppers" CD.
Disc 1 also has some beauties, such as "As Sure as I'm Standing Here, I Don't Want to Walk Without You, and If I Should Love Again."
And there are just so many other great songs here, all the classics and more, HOURS of great entertainment. Check out the list. There's also the DVD and a substantial booklet of nostalgic pictures and comments, including the stud-muffin picture of Barry on the inside cover. I'm guessing he was in his early 30s.
THE DVD
The DVD begins with a faded black and white clip of "Chapel of Love," sung by a very young Bette Midler and accompanied on piano by a very young Barry Manilow with glasses. "Very Strange Medley" is also a very young Barry, with shoulder length blond hair singing some commercial jingles he wrote, like "Doctor Pepper" and "State Farm is there. . .," along with "You Deserve a Break Today, at McDonalds". There is also some funny kibitzing going on while he and the ladies are singing. Next is "Mandy," probably from 1973 or so, belted out on a shoulder length brown-haired Barry, playing a huge white piano. I believe this is the retro clip he uses a piece of in some of his concerts when he does a comparison Mandy song between now and then.
"I Write the Songs" is next, again with a young shoulder-length sandy-haired Barry. This song "just released" on his "new" album (coming out in about a week--at that time). He just stood up from the piano and he is wearing light gray pants on "Saturday Night Live". You can really see those long legs and the guy-heels from the 70s. Next is a clip of little Barry and grandpop that he plays when grandpop is trying to get him to record "Happy Birthday" on a record-your-own-voice studio in New York. The dialog is accompanied by pictures of an older man and young boy, simulating the duo (I don't think it's really B & grandpop.) Those who have been to Barry concerts know that Barry often plays the clip and tells everyone about grandpop.
"It's a Miracle" follows from a concert by a brown, poofy-shoulder-length-haired, young, bouncy, blue-leisure-suited Barry with silver shoes. Next is B with a light blue denim jacket that really shows off those baby blue eyes while he sings the beautiful "This One's for You" with such feeling. The close-ups on this are great for watching the facial expressions on him. You can really see his heart in his eyes, as he sings this song. Then the camera fades in to pix of "grandpop and the boy". Barry is indicating "this song is for you, grandpop".
B's Emmy Award presentation for Best Comedy/Variety Special is next, showing a very surprised B winning and making a few comments.
Ooooo.Wait till you see the absolutely ADORABLE clip on "Daybreak". Oh, this is just too awesome. We have a light blue jean, purple Brooklyn sweat-shirted Barry singing and bringing in children singing it, then switching to senior citizens, and culminating with cartoon characters, like singing butterflies, and then everybody. He's maybe 35? in this clip. He's funny in this clip, too and in several others. Oh, his beagle "Bagel" is in this one, too. He even gets smacked in the head with a prop.
Now we have a red Brooklyn College sweat-shirted blue-jeaned Barry, with tinted aviator eyeglasses, shoulder length blondish hair, nicely styled, and a gorgeous smile singing Copacabana. The ladies come out later with awesome costumes. While you're watching them, Barry sneaks back and puts on a fancy outfit, dances back onstage and does a little comedy routine. He and the dancers magically change outfits and do a wild Latin dance. If nothing was on the DVD but this one Copa number, it would be great, but you have ALL this stuff. I am truly impressed!
"Weekend in New England" is next. Same time period, with Barry in curly blond shoulder length hair and a baby blue sweater. He;s singing his heart out on this one, Ladies! Oh, the pure PASSION, and some serious close-ups, too! "The Old Songs Medley" is next from a curly brown-haired Barry, in concert in England. This might be the Bleheim Palace concert. The audience is HUGE! The pix are so clear and close, you can see the sweat rolling down B's face. Oooo, here comes "I Don't Wanna Walk Without You"! One of my all time favorites. God! I LOVE it! He even does a little tap dance. "Let's Hang On" is next! GO BARRY!!!--and finishing with "The Old Songs" again. This medley, including the tap dance, is on a CD "Barry on Broadway" or something like that, which is out of print right now.
"When October Goes," lyric written by Johnny Mercer, is sung by B at a recording session and he explains how Mercer's widow gave him the lyrics Johnny had written.
B finished the DVD with another favorite of mine. "Keep Each Other Warm" is a beautiful song to play at a wedding. Barry is a little older in this last performance. I'll guess and say he's about 40ish? And looks like he might have been working out. God! What a gorgeous song and he is so animated in this wonderful performance!
This 58 minute DVD is a nice little added treat--a walk down memory lane. Although it does not encompass the whole 35 years of Barry, it does portray a period sufficient to remind you of his vast longevity. The change in clothing styles is neat to watch, too. Lots of great close-ups. The sound and visual quality are great. The DVD seems to have been actually made in 1992, obviously from 70s clips and later. I would have bought this DVD as a single package and never been disappointed. Geeze. I am so sorry I had this set for awhile and just watched the DVD in January 2008. Fantastic!
For all you get in this package, it is truly a PHENOMINAL buy! If you are a Barry fan, you DO NOT want to pass this collection up. If you're not a Barry fan, well, you just don't know what you're missin', man! The Showman of our generation? Heck, yeah!
People ask me why I'm so happy all the time and some ask "what I'm on." I try to tell them my big secret is all that Barry music, but they just won't believe me. (Don't tell anybody, but it keeps me young, too. S-h-h-h-h.) Hey, let the Spirit COME ON IN! Buy this set. It is well worth the price. It's also a great gift for someone. A lotta music for what you can easily spend on dinner at Outback!
"
Barry's Finest
Mart | Florida | 10/21/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Interesting twists on his own songs, this set includes the "original" recording of "Mandy" when it was "Brandy" The original Scott English single. Alternate takes, live stage and live studio recordings including control booth banter and conversations with Barry Manilow.
This ultimate collection includes a DVD with some of Manilow's favorite live performances on stage around the world. True Manilow fans will want this compilation in their collection to treasure for years to come. Includes a Manilow retrospective book depicting Manilow's albums and career highlights."
Perfection!
song-of-love | Land of Golden Sun! | 12/10/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I absolutely LOVE this box set. It not only covers a wide and varied career of one of the 20th century's most talented musicians, it truly gives you the virtual soul of the man himself. He took such loving care in detailing and examining each song, as if it were one of his children. Each song, many unreleased, have composer commentaries. One is the greatest songs he's EVER done (and that's a long list) is here: "Let Freedom Ring" Bound to be a classic song in the vein of Yankee Doodle Dandy, this masterpiece will move you to realize why America really is the greatest place in the world to be. For the new fan or the die hard one this set is a MUST"
Barry Manilow- Complete Collection surprises included
J. Adler | NYC | 01/20/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"To potential buyers of the Barry Complete Collection: I grew up singing his songs and have never stopped. I went on to have a 20 year classical singing career but Barry always remained part of my "I call it happy Music"....This collection is interesting for it combines so many different styles and Barry himself is not shy to try for EX: Ave Maria which is my least favorite. I also have never been a lover of the very fast Copa and and other's like it. I have alwys been a ballad gal at heart. Barry does not fall short here with this extended 4 CD and one DVD collection. What I lOVE is that he shares with us so much of his early years with demos where he can even make a mistake and we won't care. He shows us he is a human who sighs and may sing a note that is too edgy or added words on a never released song that you do not hear on the released album. I find this a lot of fun and the added booklet gives you a solid history of the background of Barry's talent which is immense. His voice is his voice and he never feels that he needs to make a big deal about it. It is and appropriate for what he does and he is one of the best song writers we will ever have. I am and will always be a true fan of Barry Manilow. If you ar a die hard Barry fan "This one is for you""