Marlene VerPlanck - You Gotta Have Heart - The Songs Of Richard Adler (1997)

Artist: Marlene VerPlanck
Title: You Gotta Have Heart - The Songs Of Richard Adler
Year Of Release: 1997
Label: Varese Sarabande
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 01:03:58
Total Size: 406 MB | 145 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: You Gotta Have Heart - The Songs Of Richard Adler
Year Of Release: 1997
Label: Varese Sarabande
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 01:03:58
Total Size: 406 MB | 145 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
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01. I'm Seeing Rainbows
02. I Ask Myself
03. Hey There
04. Near To You
05. Whoever Invented Love?
06. What's Wrong With Me?
07. A New Town Is A Blue Town
08. If I Knew Then
09. Whatever Lola Wants
10. You Gotta Have Heart
11. You Knew What I Needed
12. Another Time Another Place
13. Christmas In Your Heart
14. No Soap Blues
15. If You Win You Lose
16. Put Your Money On Me
It says something about the state of musical business in the United States when New York-based songstress Marlene Ver Planck has to travel to Paris and London to do an album honoring the writer of a musical about a New York baseball team. Richard Adler, with Jerry Ross, wrote Damn Yankees, which opened in 1954 and ran for more than a thousand performances. Three songs from that long running musical are included on this tribute album, the seductive "Whatever Lola Wants," the hopeful "You Gotta Have Heart," and "Near to You." The latter features an excellent solo by an unidentified tenor sax player. Adler's other hit musical Pajama Game, with Ross again collaborating, is represented by the romantic "Hey There" and the doleful "A New Town Is a Blue Town." "Hey There" reached No. 1 on the pop charts for Rosemary Clooney. Adler was never able to produce another Broadway musical winner but did come up with "Everybody Loves a Lover," a hit for Doris Day.
The remaining tunes on the album are pretty, but not memorable. The quizzical "Whoever Invented Love?" and a vampish "I Ask Myself" are the best of the rest. What Adler's less familiar material lacks in substance, Ver Planck makes up for with her impeccable phrasing and delivery. She elevates Adler's lesser known songs to a level they likely have never seen. Like Jeri Southern, Ver Planck has the ability to breathe some life into unfamiliar, marginal material. The CD is also enhanced by lush arrangements by husband J. (Billy) Ver Planck and London's Radio Big Band, and the Paris based Saxomania, the latter group augmented with strings. Regrettably, the liner notes fail to identify which group is backing Ver Planck on each track. You Gotta Have Heart is a mixed bag, some good songs, some marginal, but all nicely performed by a talented singer.~You Gotta Have Heart: Marlene Sings Richard Adler Review by Dave Nathan
The remaining tunes on the album are pretty, but not memorable. The quizzical "Whoever Invented Love?" and a vampish "I Ask Myself" are the best of the rest. What Adler's less familiar material lacks in substance, Ver Planck makes up for with her impeccable phrasing and delivery. She elevates Adler's lesser known songs to a level they likely have never seen. Like Jeri Southern, Ver Planck has the ability to breathe some life into unfamiliar, marginal material. The CD is also enhanced by lush arrangements by husband J. (Billy) Ver Planck and London's Radio Big Band, and the Paris based Saxomania, the latter group augmented with strings. Regrettably, the liner notes fail to identify which group is backing Ver Planck on each track. You Gotta Have Heart is a mixed bag, some good songs, some marginal, but all nicely performed by a talented singer.~You Gotta Have Heart: Marlene Sings Richard Adler Review by Dave Nathan
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