Peggy Lee: The Man I Love - LP 180g Mono Vinyl, Remastered

Around the same time that Peggy Lee decamped her longtime label home, Capitol Records, for what turned out to be a five-year sojourn at Decca Records in 1952, an apparently washed-up Frank Sinatra signed with Capitol. In 1957, when Lee returned to Capitol, Sinatra had re-established himself as a major recording artist. Meanwhile, the recording world had changed with the emergence of the 12-inch LP as an industry standard. "The Man I Love", Lee's first recording for Capitol in the format after re-signing, matched her with the company's flagship artist, Sinatra, who was credited as the album's conductor, his name printed on the front cover in the same size as Lee's. A year earlier, Sinatra had conducted his "Tone Poems Of Color" album for Capitol, and though the singer did not read music and relied on arranger Nelson Riddle, he again proved himself able to make his intentions clear in working with Lee. "The Man I Love" is a concept album in the manner pioneered by Sinatra at Capitol, a group of 12 songs chosen to express a single theme. That theme, as the title suggests, is a woman's unwavering devotion to a man, as expressed in songs often composed by gilt-edged songwriters (Gershwin, Arlen, Rodgers, Kern, etc.) and taken from Broadway shows. That devotion is not starry eyed, however; in several songs, Lee acknowledges the flaws in her paramour (e.g., "Something Wonderful"), but then explains them away and reconfirms her commitment. In fact, toward the end she worries what she would do "If I Should Lose You" before declaring "There Is No Greater Love" and finally idealizing the long-term relationship in the closing song, "The Folks Who Live on the Hill". It wouldn't be surprising to find that Sinatra directed Lee to sing like one of his favorite singers, Billie Holiday, since she often does, laying back in understated vocal performances to reinforce the near-victimhood of the woman depicted in the songs. Riddle supports these interpretations with lush string charts that hint of dark feelings. The result is a superb pairing of singer, conductor, and arranger on an album that re-conceives Lee as a Capitol recording artist in the Sinatra concept album mold. Zur der gleichen Zeit, als Peggy Lee 1952 ihr heimatliches Plattenlabel für einen fünfjährigen Aufenthalt bei Decca verließ, unterzeichnete ein anscheinend gescheiterter Frank Sinatra bei Capitol. Als Lee 1957 zu Capitol zurückkehrte hatte sich Sinatra als bedeutender Künstler, der auch wieder Platten aufnahm, neu etabliert. Inzwischen hatte sich die Welt der Schallplatten durch das Erscheinen der 30 cm-Langspielplatte und deren Durchsetzung als industrieller Standard verändert. "The Man I Love" war nach neuerlicher Vertragsunterzeichnung Lee's erste Aufnahme in dem neuen LP-Format für Capitol und brachte sie mit dem Flaggschiff der Firma, Frank Sinatra, zusammen, dessen Name in der gleichen Größe wie Lee's auf dem Cover als Dirigent des Albums aufgeführt wurde. Ein Jahr zuvor hatte Sinatra sein "Tone Poems Of Color"-Album für Capitol dirigiert, und obwohl der Sänger keine Noten lesen konnte und sich auf Arrangeur Nelson Riddle verlassen musste, zeigte er sich auch diesmal, bei der Zusammenarbeit mit Lee, in der Lage, seine Ansichten durchzusetzen.

Peggy Lee: The Man I Love - LP 180g Mono Vinyl, Remastered

Around the same time that Peggy Lee decamped her longtime label home, Capitol Records, for what turned out to be a five-year sojourn at Decca Records in 1952, an apparently washed-up Frank Sinatra signed with Capitol. In 1957, when Lee returned to Capitol, Sinatra had re-established himself as a major recording artist. Meanwhile, the recording world had changed with the emergence of the 12-inch LP as an industry standard. "The Man I Love", Lee's first recording for Capitol in the format after re-signing, matched her with the company's flagship artist, Sinatra, who was credited as the album's conductor, his name printed on the front cover in the same size as Lee's. A year earlier, Sinatra had conducted his "Tone Poems Of Color" album for Capitol, and though the singer did not read music and relied on arranger Nelson Riddle, he again proved himself able to make his intentions clear in working with Lee. "The Man I Love" is a concept album in the manner pioneered by Sinatra at Capitol, a group of 12 songs chosen to express a single theme. That theme, as the title suggests, is a woman's unwavering devotion to a man, as expressed in songs often composed by gilt-edged songwriters (Gershwin, Arlen, Rodgers, Kern, etc.) and taken from Broadway shows. That devotion is not starry eyed, however; in several songs, Lee acknowledges the flaws in her paramour (e.g., "Something Wonderful"), but then explains them away and reconfirms her commitment. In fact, toward the end she worries what she would do "If I Should Lose You" before declaring "There Is No Greater Love" and finally idealizing the long-term relationship in the closing song, "The Folks Who Live on the Hill". It wouldn't be surprising to find that Sinatra directed Lee to sing like one of his favorite singers, Billie Holiday, since she often does, laying back in understated vocal performances to reinforce the near-victimhood of the woman depicted in the songs. Riddle supports these interpretations with lush string charts that hint of dark feelings. The result is a superb pairing of singer, conductor, and arranger on an album that re-conceives Lee as a Capitol recording artist in the Sinatra concept album mold.

Zur der gleichen Zeit, als Peggy Lee 1952 ihr heimatliches Plattenlabel für einen fünfjährigen Aufenthalt bei Decca verließ, unterzeichnete ein anscheinend gescheiterter Frank Sinatra bei Capitol. Als Lee 1957 zu Capitol zurückkehrte hatte sich Sinatra als bedeutender Künstler, der auch wieder Platten aufnahm, neu etabliert. Inzwischen hatte sich die Welt der Schallplatten durch das Erscheinen der 30 cm-Langspielplatte und deren Durchsetzung als industrieller Standard verändert. "The Man I Love" war nach neuerlicher Vertragsunterzeichnung Lee's erste Aufnahme in dem neuen LP-Format für Capitol und brachte sie mit dem Flaggschiff der Firma, Frank Sinatra, zusammen, dessen Name in der gleichen Größe wie Lee's auf dem Cover als Dirigent des Albums aufgeführt wurde. Ein Jahr zuvor hatte Sinatra sein "Tone Poems Of Color"-Album für Capitol dirigiert, und obwohl der Sänger keine Noten lesen konnte und sich auf Arrangeur Nelson Riddle verlassen musste, zeigte er sich auch diesmal, bei der Zusammenarbeit mit Lee, in der Lage, seine Ansichten durchzusetzen.

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