And The People Were With Her (Suite For Orchestra)
April Fools
Hasbrook Heights
Freefall
One Less Bell To Answer
Something Big
Monterey Penninsula
I Come To You
Walk The Way You Talk
The The Balance of Nature
Living Together, Growing Together
Reflections
Lost Horizon
Long Ago Tomorrow
I Might Frighten Her Away
I Took My Strength From You (I Had None)
Track Listings (18) - Disc #3
Features
Us
Where Are You?
We Should Have Met Sooner
No One Remembers Your Name
The Young Grow Younger Every Day
Another Spring Will Rise
Seconds
When You Bring Your Sweet Love To Me
Time and Tenderness
Summer of '77
Woman
Riverboat
Magdalena
New York Lady
There Is Time
The The Dancing Fool
I Live in the Woods
Track Listings (25) - Disc #4
The The Sundance Kid
Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head
Not Goin' Home Anymore
South American Getaway
Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head
On a Bicycle Built For Joy
Come Touch The Sun
The The Old Fun City (N.Y. Sequence)
Not Goin' Home Anymore (Reprise)
Etta's Theme
Alfie/Do You Know The Way To San Jose [Live]
Walk On By [Live]
Come Touch The Sun [Live]
Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head [Live]
The The Look of Love [Live]
Medley: Don't Make Me OverAnyone Who Had a Heart/What's New, Pussycat/W
This Guy's In Love With You [Live]
I'll Never Fall In Love Again [Live]
(They Long To Be) Close To You [Live]
Bond Street [Live]
A A House Is Not a Home [Live]
Alfie [Live]
What The World Needs Now Is Love [Live]
Promises, Promises [Live]
What The World Needs Now Is Love (Reprises) [Live]
Track Listings (23) - Disc #5
Saturday Sunshine
And So Goodbye, My Love
Don't Make Me Over
Walk On By
Don't Go Breaking My Heart
Blue on Blue
The The Last One To Be Loved
(There's) Always Something There To Remind Me
24 Hours From Tulsa
Trainsa nd Boats and Planes
Wives and Lovers
Saturday Sunshine
A A House Is Not a Home
Anyone Who Had a Heart
What's New, Pussycat
My Little Red Book (All I Do Is Talk About You)
After the Fox
The Fox Trot
Nikki
Juanita's Place - Burt Bacharach, Allen, Peter [Piano
Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)
That's What Friends Are For
Love Theme From Arthur
Long before Mike Myers' Austin Powers character idolized him on film, Burt Bacharach was the quintessential golden boy of pop music. He studied with French composer Darius Milhaud (as had jazz legend Dave Brubeck), he back... more »ed up Marlene Dietrich (something Brubeck didn't). He composed hit after hit after hit after hit for movies and singers; he pretty much launched Dionne Warwick single-handedly (well, double-handedly, with the help of lyricist Hal David). He was where everyone wanted to be, with everyone that everyone wanted to be with, making the scene and making the scene his.
How do you fit all that musical goodness into five compact discs?
Focus.
Our collection is Burt being Burt, occasionally with a guest vocal where called for, but mostly the man in his own voice, conducting and playing and just generally being his luminous self. Scan the track list for song titles you don't know; there won't be all that many. It's impossible to believe that the man is three quarters of a century old, yet this collection dates back to the early Sixties, and bookends his performing career on one end with his Kapp recordings and on the other with A&M masters.
Lotsa rare and previously-unreleased recordings, amazing liner notes by Lauren Oliver, Phil Ramone and Richard Carpenter, incredible photos and much love went into this big bouquet for America's premier pop songwriter of the last half-century. Yeah, baby!
Part of a series of high quality limited edition foil stamped 7-3/4" x 6-1/4" cloth bound books.« less
Long before Mike Myers' Austin Powers character idolized him on film, Burt Bacharach was the quintessential golden boy of pop music. He studied with French composer Darius Milhaud (as had jazz legend Dave Brubeck), he backed up Marlene Dietrich (something Brubeck didn't). He composed hit after hit after hit after hit for movies and singers; he pretty much launched Dionne Warwick single-handedly (well, double-handedly, with the help of lyricist Hal David). He was where everyone wanted to be, with everyone that everyone wanted to be with, making the scene and making the scene his.
How do you fit all that musical goodness into five compact discs?
Focus.
Our collection is Burt being Burt, occasionally with a guest vocal where called for, but mostly the man in his own voice, conducting and playing and just generally being his luminous self. Scan the track list for song titles you don't know; there won't be all that many. It's impossible to believe that the man is three quarters of a century old, yet this collection dates back to the early Sixties, and bookends his performing career on one end with his Kapp recordings and on the other with A&M masters.
Lotsa rare and previously-unreleased recordings, amazing liner notes by Lauren Oliver, Phil Ramone and Richard Carpenter, incredible photos and much love went into this big bouquet for America's premier pop songwriter of the last half-century. Yeah, baby!
Part of a series of high quality limited edition foil stamped 7-3/4" x 6-1/4" cloth bound books.
CD Reviews
Yeah Baby! Well...some of it is...but the rest is awful...
Mark Barry at Reckless Records, Lon | UK | 05/27/2008
(3 out of 5 stars)
"This sumptuous 5CD set was released in the USA-only in 2004 as a non-numbered limited edition of 5000 by Universal's premium re-issue label, HIP-O SELECT. I've managed to borrow a copy from a friend - and it's a very mixed bag to say the least. There's a lot on here, so let's get to it straight away...
Disc 1 (72:14 minutes):
Tracks 1 to 11 are the album "Reach Out", A&M SP 4131, 1967
Track 12, "The Bell That Couldn't Jingle" is the A-side of the A&M 7" single 1004, 1968
Tracks 13 to 23 are the album "Make It Easy On Yourself", A&M SP 4188, 1969
Disc 2 (77:00 minutes):
Tracks 1 to 10 are the album "Burt Bacharach", A&M SP 3501, 1971
Tracks 11 to 20 are the album "Living Together", A&M SP 3527, 1973
Track 21 is the 1st song on the album "Futures", A&M SP 4622, 1977
Disc 3 (79:59 minutes):
Tracks 1 to 10 are the remaining songs on the album "Futures", A&M SP 4622, 1977
Tracks 11 to 18 are the album "Woman", A&M SP 3709, 1979
Disc 4 (78:24 minutes):
Tracks 1 to 9 are the soundtrack "Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid", A&M SP 4227, 1969
(track 2 is the famous B.J. Thomas number 1 chart hit, "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head"; track 5 is an instrumental version of it; track 6, "On A Bicycle Built For Joy", is another vocal version of "Raindrops..." by B.J. Thomas, but the one used in the film with the speeded-up `vaudeville' bit towards the end of the song)
Track 10 is "Etta's Theme", a previously unreleased alternate version of track 7, "Come Touch The Sun", it's from the "Butch Cassidy..." sessions, 1969
Tracks 11 to 25 are the album "Burt Bacharach In Concert", A&M SP 68279, 1974
(11, 13-15 and 17-25 are previously unreleased in the USA)
Disc 5 (is titled "Essentials", 64:40 minutes):
Track 1 is a previously unreleased alternate mono mix of "Saturday Sunshine", 1963
Track 2 is "And So Goodbye, My Love", a US 7" single on Kapp Records 532, 1963
Tracks 3 to 14 are the album "Hit Maker!" on Kapp Records KS 3428, 1965
Track 15 and 16 are "What's New, Pussycat?"/"My Little Red Book (All I Do Is Talk About You)", the A & B-side of Kapp Records 685, a US 7" single from 1965
[the A is not the more famous Tom Jones hit, but has vocals by Joel Grey and the B vocals by Tony Middleton]
Track 17 is from the soundtrack "After The Fox" on United Artists UAS 5148, 1966
Track 18 is "The Fox Trot", a US 7" single on United Artists 50123, 1966
Tracks 19 and 20 are "Nikki"/"Juanita's Place", the A&B sides of Liberty 55934, a US 7" single from 1966
Track 21 is from the soundtrack "Arthur The Album", 1981 on Warner Brothers, it's an instrumental and not the number 1 chart hit sung by Christopher Cross
Track 22 is "That's What Friends Are For", from the soundtrack to "Night Shift" in 1982 on Warner Brothers, it's an instrumental and not the chart hit sung by Dionne Warwick & Friends in 1985
Track 23 is "Love Theme From Arthur", on the soundtrack "Arthur 2 On The Rocks", 1988 on A&M Records, it's an instrumental version
Burt Bacharach and his lyricist Hal David have penned huge numbers of great tunes across the decades, carried into record charts the world over by scores of superb interpretative artists. But therein lies the problem with this nice, but hugely expensive set - it does NOT provide an overview of those definitive versions, but instead Bacharach's interpretations of his own songs, and to call them `cheesy' is to be way too generous! Most tracks are instrumentals and removing the singer, and the lyrics they sing, reduces the songs to boring brass blasters that just don't work. When he does sing, his voice is grating and wildly un-expressive. They are to my ear just awful - beyond the valley of drivel. Remember, this exclusive and limited 5CD velvet book set clocks in at over $150 Stateside and £100 sterling here in the UK - and given that half of the material is un-listenable dreck - a person has to question whether it's worth even half that price.
Don't get me wrong - there are lovely moments on here, the 1971 remake of the 1966 "Nikki" is beautiful - both are included. The three instrumental versions on Disc 5 of The Arthur movies and Night Shift track are as lovely as anything John Barry has done. The remastering too - superlative - it's been done by tape supremo ERICK LABSON at Universal and is typically warm, full and beautiful to hear, and I suspect, one of the main reasons why easy/soundtrack enthusiasts will buy this set - despite its price.
But I would say - hand on my heart - hold those expectations on this one. Try to hear it before you buy. Or better, still, purchase the original long-book issue of the superlative 1998 Rhino 3CD Box set "The Look Of Love" instead - it's a fraction of the cost and ten times the listening pleasure - and its track-by-track booklet a work of art."
Splendid!
rollo | usa | 10/20/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This collection contains virtually all of Burt Bacharach's recordings for A&M records in L.A..These songs were not super big hits but they are colors and sketches from the life of a musical genius. His compositions are introspective and intuitive. His arrangements are always first rate. His piano playing is flawless. He always uses the finest instrumentalists and technicians. There are 3 timeless performances included here featuring the voice of Joshie Armstead that are so powerful that if you ever hear her sing them you will buy this whole collection. "Seconds", "Us", and "Then, I Took My Strength From You". WOW!!!!!!"
Great Limited Edition Box set!!
Sellerfella | 02/24/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Tracklisting:
Disc 01
1. Reach Out For Me
2. Alfie
3. Bond Street
4. Are You There (With Another Girl)
5. What The World Needs Now Is Love
6. The Look Of Love
7. A House Is Not A Home
8. I Say A Little Prayer
9. The Windows Of The World
10. Lisa
11. Message To Michael
12. The Bell That Couldn't Jingle
13. Promises, Promises
14. I'll Never Fall In Love Again
15. Knowing When To Leave
16. Any Day Now
17. Wanting Things
18. Who Ever You Are I Love You
19. Make It Easy On Yourself
20. Do You Know The Way To San Jose
21. Pacific Coast Highway
22. She's Gone Away
23. This Guy's In Love With You
Disc 02
1. Mexican Divorce
2. (They Long To Be) Close To You
3. Nikki
4. Wives And Lovers
5. All Kinds Of People
6. And The People Were With Her (suite for orchestra)
7. April Fools
8. Hasbrook Heights
9. Freefall
10. One Less Bell To Answer
11. Something Big
12. Monterey Penninsila
13. I Come To You
14. Walk The Way You Talk
15. The Balance Of Nature
16. Living Together, Growing Together
17. Reflections
18. Lost Horizon
19. Lost Ago Tomorrow
20. I Might Frighten Her Away
21. I Took My Strength From You (I Had More)
Disc 03
1. Futures
2. Us
3. Where Are You?
4. We Should Have Met Sooner
5. No One Remembers My Name
6. TheYoung Grow Younger Every Day
7. Another Spring Will Rise
8. Seconds
9. When You Bring Your Sweet Love To Me
10. Time And Tenderness
11. Summer Of '77
12. Woman
13. Riverboat
14. Magdalena
15. New York Lady
16. There Is Time
17. The Dancing Fool
18. I Live In The Woods
Disc 04
1. The Sundance Kid
2. Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head
3. Not Going Home Anymore
4. South American Getaway
5. Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head
6. On A Bicycle Built For Joy
7. Come Touch The Sun
8. The Old Fun City (N.Y. Sequence)
9. Not Going Home Anymore (Reprise)
10. Etta's Theme
11. Alfie/Do You Know The Way To San Jose (Live)
12. Walk On By (Live)
13. Come Touch The Sun (Live)
14. Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head (Live)
15. The Look Of Love (Live)
16. Medley: Don't Make Me Over/Anyone Who Had A Heart/What's New, Pussycat/Wives An Lovers/24 Hours From
17. This Guy's In Love With You (Live)
18. I'll Never Fall In Love Again (Live)
19. (They Long To Be) Close To You (Live)
20. Bond Street (Live)
21. A House Is Not A Home (Live)
22. Alfie (Live)
23. What The World Needs Now Is Love (Live)
24. Promises, Promises (Live)
25. What The World Needs Now Is Love (Reprise) (Live)
Disc 05
1. Saturday Sunshine
2. And So Goodbye, My Love
3. Don't Make Me Over
4. Walk On By
5. Don't Go Breaking My Heart
6. Blue On Blue
7. The Last One To Be Loved
8. (There's) Always Something There To Remind Me
9. 24 Hours From Tulsa
10. Trains Boats and Planes
11. Wives And Lovers
12. Saturday Sunshine
13. A House Is Not A Home
14. Anyone Who Had A Heart
15. What's New Pussycat
16. My Little Red Book (All I Do Is Talk About You)
17. After The Fox
18. Nikki
19. Juanita's Place
20. Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)
21. That's What Friends Are For
22. Love Theme From Arthur"
Burt bacharach SOMETHING BIG: The Complete A&M Years... And
Rob Stoneman ocean child | Mother Earth, The Milky Way | 11/09/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"It was pretty bleak when the Industry made the transition to compact disc. I spent all of the 80's looking for anything out of print.
Burt Bacharach SOMETHING BIG: The Complete A&M Years.. And More!, is big payback.
HIP-O Select and A&M Records are to be commended for assembling and preserving some of the most beautiful music on the Market.
A huge contribution to the Great American Songbook.
It was a bit of a shock to find the collection in a clothbound jacket with a silver embossed portrait of the Artist.
I had to decide if I were going to place the collection in a vault, or risk accruing some cat hairs and being loved to death.
As it turns out, the clothbound jacket prove vital preserving the contents.
Burt Bacharach SOMETHING BIG: The Complete A&M Years... And More! is not an anthology.
7 solo albums by Burt Bacharach in their entirety, including his first solo album originally released in England on Kapp, the Oscar winning Soundtrack for Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid, and the very rare A&M 1974 concert, Burt Bacharach Live In Japan.
Unprescedented.
I appreciate the gusto of the initial Amazon customer reviews simply entering the track listing, a litany of fun.
I bought my first Burt Bacharach A&M record Spring of 1969, when I was in fourth grade, age 10. A 45 disc of Herb Albert This Guy's In Love With You.
A #1. Hit.
It cost one week allowance. For the next 7 days I had to curb trips to the comic book and candy rack, a small lifetime for a kid.
I smuggled a piece of manilla school paper and used one of my father's light blue pencils to jot down the lyrics of This Guys In Love With You, line by line, lifting the needle from the record untill I was done.
Testimony Burt Bacharach and Hal David cover all demographics.
I purchased a couple of his albums in the fifth grade, Burt Bacharach Make It Easy On Yourself cost a month's allowance. Around ten dollars by today standards. I had to pull alot of weeds to get it.
The Soundtrack for Butch Cassidy & The Sundance kid was my main birthday present when I turned 11, Spring 1970.
My parents let me cart the family Hi-Fi into my room. I'd listen to the records before bed, no outside interference that way.
I phased out my old vinyl a long time ago, but the recordings are still a nice way to unwind.
I've enjoyed the wealth of Burt Bacharach books, CD's and DVD's to flood the Market the last decade.
Before Chat Rooms, I only had a A&M Promo disc with four simple commentaries by Burt Bacharach to draw from.
I committed the quotes to memory, I shared them with friends and Music Teachers for many years.
They opened doors for me.
"Always look for the most individualistic thing that you can get from a instrument, or from a Instrumentation. If you're doing it as a Instrumental, the more voices you put on or the more instruments you put on carrying a melody, the less personal it becomes. That's why I've always loved the trumpet played very delicately, you know... A singular instrument- that's expressive of getting close to where a human voice is, and undercutting notes a little bit. Scooping up to notes the way a voice can do, became more personal to me than 16 Violins playing the lead".
Listen to the instrumental Don't Make Me Over, Track 3, CD 5, the brass lead always stops me dead in my tracks. The song is also one of my favorite examples how snatches of vocals are used to full effect.
"I remember the first album that I did, before I came to A&M, I did an album on Kapp, and I did it in England, and it was a successful album there, and it had no success, so to speak, here, untill the A&M albums sort of took off and they re-issued it, and I think it did kind of well. And, I had alot of trouble with that first album, trying to get a point of view, because I was so closely associated to a word that went with a note, and if you took the word out, then what did it do to the note, and the emotion of the note, or notes, or a phrase, or something like that... and there was just some songs in that first album I had to just go to, uhm... snatches of vocals, not from a singular voice, but from, for Girls, it gave me something remotely, what Dionne gave me, you see?"
After recording a string of hits with Dionne it must've been liberating to come out with his first solo album, the Orchesra is put to full use on 24 Hours From Tulsa, a song that leaves my heart throbbing.
Burt Bacharach also had some fun releasing singles on Kapp like Tony Middleton My Little Red Book (All I Do Is Talk About You), a personal favorite of mine laden with lots of echo and kettle drum.
As Burt Bacharach continued writing and recording his audiance increased, a huge Pop Star, fun music, with all kinds of unaccredited flourishes.
Look for the instrumental, Are You There With Another Girl, Track 4, CD 1.
The principal character in the song is having trouble getting a hold of her love interest, if he doesn't answer the phone soon, her jealousy may escalate with a trip around his place to see if he's there, the truth of the matter is, her man is probably preoccupied and taken the phone off the hook.
Burt Bacharach uses a miked organ to replicate the sound of Bell Telephone's famous busy signal... brilliant!
"Well, I don't think just sitting down and writing Pop Songs is really kind of the answer, you know. You write a Pop Song and your publisher takes it out and shows it to a Artist. And that's not the right way, I would suppose the right way would be to have more control when you show it to somebody like I did in the past. I would want to do more Theater if the things around it were more pallatable. I mean, like the economics of the Theater are so bad now. And also, there's something about the impermanence, and it's also very hard to keep a performance terrific. But the thing I love about Film's see, and of course Record too... you know if you got it once, it's gonna' be there, you got it forever. It's not gonna' change".
Burt Bacharach's comments were said with lots of passion like they had been churning over in his guts. They're very powerful words, they drove me to scour retail record racks for welcome new product for many years, untill I manage to find a comfortable platform trading services with Amazon.
I would like to think Burt Bacharach is passionate about trading products online like I am.
The following entry says alot about the man.
"Well, I really don't know, what really influenced me, you know, what music sources influenced me, you know, I've always had a feeling what you write and what you are able to convey is a certain general gathering, or stockpile of what you feel, rather than anything specific. I just think it's a whole stockpile of your life. What you feel, and what you feel about People, and how you react to everything around you. To your family life, and, uh, the amount of happiness, or unhappiness. Stress, or nonstress in your life, and, you're just like a sort of a sponge, and then you write accordingly. I do think you do get influenced, and you have to be subconsciously influenced. I don't care who you are... I mean... I've talked to Songwriters, and they've said, (and a woman), and he says, they never listen to the radio because they don't want to hear anything that might kind of subconsciously manifest its' way in his work, you know, not that he's afraid of coming up with somebody's ideal, but just to be unconsciously influenced. I mean, I don't feel that way. I feel I got to listen to the radio as much as I can. I don't at home, I listen to the news at home, and I listen in the car, to music, when I drive. I drive alot to the beach and back to Los Angeles. Then I can hear alot of the music that I would hear at home".
No doubt, Burt Bacharach remains in full command.
In addition to his significant contribution to Popular Music in the 60's, A&M Records produced a number of albums in the 70's that are huge life cycle accomplishments for Burt Bacharach.
Freefall, And The People Were With Her, Long Ago Tomorrow and Monterey Penninsula... A marvelous way to kick off the early 70's, culminating in the albums Futures, with a sleuth of guest musicians, and Woman, recorded live in one four-hour session with the Houston Symphony Orchestra.
Major works.
look for Tracks 1 through 18 on CD 3.
Where Are You, Us, When You Bring Your Sweet Love To me, Woman, There Is Time and The Dancing Fool are some of the loveliest pieces in the Burt Bacharach canon.
Burt Bacharach made good on his word.
"You know, I keep saying, keep thinking, that maybe... you know, I'm going to do something in greater proportion- not meaning greatness, but greater proportion in time, like for a big Orchestra, or, for a Symphony size Orchestra. I haven't done it yet, but that doesn't mean I won't. The important thing is to keep writing and not get your time too dissapated doing other things".
Burt Bacharach has proven to be quite a family man, the references to his children off Burt Bacharach At This Time are endearing.
It's fun to see what pops up on Amazon MP3. The public is fortunate he never quit working.
Burt Bacharach said he started arranging and producing his own material out of self defence.
Cover versions that don't have his personal stamp are a bit of a punch in the stomach.
In addition to his work with A&M, round off your collection with albums featuring Elvis Costello, Ron Isley, and his recent work with The Sydney Symphony Orchestra.
You can always count on Burt Bacharach to deliver the goods.
"
Bacharach Solo Greatness
Jon Holcombe | 03/27/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This collection follows Burt's solo work from the early sixties into the 70's. Understand, this is the artist performing his own works. It is not a greatest hits collection of his famous songs performed by Dionne Warwick, Jackie DeShannon, Jerry Butler, and others. See Rhino's "The Look Of Love: The Burt Bacharach Collection" (a fantastic companion piece) if that is what you are looking for. I consider this work essential if you are a Bacharach fan. His mid 70's, post Hal David albums "Futures" and "Woman" are here in their entirety, as well as his A&M solo work, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid", and so much more. I do not consider this "elevator music". Bacharach melodies provided the soundtrack for the 1960's. His innovative use of horns, vocal and musical arrangements, different time signatures, make this music as fresh now as it was 40 years ago. Much of this music is instrumental, which is perfect for me as I spend my day working in front of my computer.
I purchased the Henry Mancini box set "Days of Wine and Roses" a few years back, and although there are some great songs on the collection, I was struck by how dated, "kitcshy", and gimmicky many of the songs were. I've never felt that way about Bacharach's music, any of it, from the 60's or 70's.
I am still hoping that someone releases the "Together?" album, an movie soundtrack from 1979 that I was lucky enough to find on record album a couple of years ago. The songs were written by Baracharch and Paul Anka and are also very good."