Sammy Davis Jr. - The Song And Dance Man (2025) Hi-Res

  • 12 Dec, 01:50
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Artist:
Title: The Song And Dance Man
Year Of Release: 1976 / 2025
Label: Universal Records
Genre: Jazz, Pop, Easy Listening, Swing
Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24bit-96kHz
Total Time: 28:37
Total Size: 690 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Baretta's Theme (2:27)
2. Love Is All Around (3:36)
3. We'll Make It This Time (3:11)
4. Mary Hartman (3:23)
5. You Can Count On Me (2:12)
6. Song And Dance Man (2:43)
7. I Heard A Song (3:00)
8. (I'd Be) A Legend In My Time (Single Version) (2:44)
9. Snap Your Fingers (2:53)
10. Chico & The Man (2:38)

In the Billboard magazine edition of 30th November 1974, it was announced that Sammy Davis, Jr. had left MGM Records and signed for 20th Century Records. But this was no splashy media fuss, as Sammy’s previous signings had been, more a footnote buried on page 20. It was a difficult time for singers like Sammy on record. The same month Warner Records’ President Joel Smith told Billboard: “The record-buying audience is not buying that kind of legitimate pop singer. Each generation wants its own heroes … the people who love them in Las Vegas don’t buy records.”

Furthermore it was a difficult period for Sammy personally as well as professionally. Struggling to maintain his status in the entertainment world, he found refuge in alcohol and drugs and became an occasionally unstable performer. Outside of his demanding touring schedule, his focus shifted away from vinyl and toward television – he debuted a new syndicated talk/variety show hybrid titled Sammy & Company in April 1975.

Given the various factors at play, Sammy released only a handful of singles in the United States over the next two years, although all of them charted on Billboard’s Adult Contemporary (AC) chart in the US (at the time called the ‘Easy Listening’ chart).

One thing Sammy did in 1975 was lay down vocals to the instrumental theme to the television show Baretta for the show’s second season, which began in September. The theme, titled “Keep Your Eye On The Sparrow” was written and arranged by Dave Grusin and quickly became considered one of the best TV themes of the era. Singing the theme to a hit TV show was a first for Sammy, although he had a bit of a history of recording covers of TV themes. He had recorded the theme to My Mother The Car for Reprise and the theme to The Mary Tyler-Moore Show for MGM. In fact the theme song to Chico And The Man was the last thing Sammy recorded for MGM Records (he took it with him to 20th Century).

Inspired by his involvement with Baretta, Sammy stepped into the studio at the beginning of 1976 and cut a new recording of “Keep Your Eye On The Sparrow”, arranged and conducted specially by Dave Grusin himself. Released in the USA in March 1976, the single made it to #47 on the Billboard AC chart. But elsewhere in Europe, the song was an unexpected smash hit! In the spring of 1976, Sammy’s recording of the Baretta theme went to #1 in The Netherlands, Sweden and Belgium and was certified Gold. Perhaps there was a market there for an LP? The Song And Dance Man was born.

Sammy revisited the studio and recorded some more TV tunes. This included a new disco version of “Love Is All Around” (the theme to The Mary Tyler-Moore Show), two themes that had been instrumental on the actual shows but were now given brand new lyrics (Kojak and Hawaii Five-O), and an original piece that was written in tribute to the soap Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, but was not based on the actual theme music to that show. The resulting LP, The Song And Dance Man, was released by 20th Century into foreign markets including Europe, Canada, Argentina and Australia but, it appears, not in the USA. Six of the ten inclusions were TV themes.

The remaining four cuts on The Song And Dance Man, all placed on Side 2, were a mish-mash of recordings taken from various places. Sammy had brought the country-styled cover “A Legend In My Time” with him from MGM. Previously released, it had been a semi-successful single way back in May 1973, rising to #29 on the Billboard AC chart. Two more country-styled covers, “Song And Dance Man” and “Snap Your Fingers”, both produced by Jim Vinneau, had been released on a single in September 1975 and had also made the AC chart, rising to #32. “I Heard A Song” was a patriotic tribute to great figures of then-recent American history. It had been recorded for a special double LP featuring multiple artists titled Happy Birthday U.S.A., which was released during 1976 to celebrate the United States’ bicentenary.

Sammy was always proud of his popularity in Europe, and he remains popular in the U.K., France and particularly Germany, even as his star has – alas – faded somewhat in popular culture memory in the United States. In 1977, 20th Century would release another LP, this time in The Netherlands only, including almost all of the TV themes on The Song And Dance Man, plus a few new ones, titled Sammy Davis, Jr. Sings The Great TV-Tunes.


  • mufty77
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Many thanks for 24-96!