This was the singer's second LP for the label, following his Jerome Kern release A Sure Thing, which recently appeared here.
For today's album, we have two different versions - the original World Pacific release and a reissue from the 1970s, which switched the title to Yours Sincerely and reputedly comprised alternate takes from those on the original pressing. In any case, the differences are not remarkable, but I suspect they will be of interest to completists.
Please note that this set of songs was never issued in stereo, to my knowledge.
Let me also mention that this post includes another of the American Popular Music radio shows from the 1970s. with Allyn singing the works of Harold Arlen. As always, the program featured songwriter Alec Wilder and composer-pianist Loonis McGlohon.
Appropriately, the LP below begins with an Arlen song.
Let's Face the Music and Dance
| The less said about this cover, the better |
Unlike A Sure Thing, the second World Pacific LP had three arrangers - Johnny Mandel, who helmed the earlier album, Bill Holman, and Jimmy Rowles, who was also the pianist heard on the sessions. The band for the dates was called "the Bill Holman Orchestra."
Holman was a tenor saxophonist who joined Stan Kenton's band in the early 50s and soon was to become one of Kenton's primary arrangers. The arrangements here are in all ways supportive and the musicianship is excellent. Sorry but there is no information available about who is playing on the selections, nor who arranged which items.
| Bill Holman with Stan Kenton |
Allyn, Holman and the arrangers came up with a nice mix of excellent songs that aren't overly familiar, with a few exceptions.
The LP begins with one of the lesser-heard Harold Arlen standards, "Hooray for Love," which he wrote with Leo Robin. The song was introduced by old friend Tony Martin in the 1948 film Casbah, which had an excellent score, including "For Every Man There's a Woman" and "What's Good About Goodbye."
Jimmy Van Heusen and Eddie DeLange wrote "Shake Down the Stars" in 1940. Sinatra and Tommy Dorsey had a hit with it.
Vernon Duke and Yip Harburg wrote "I Like the Likes of You" for the Ziegfeld Follies of 1934
"You Send Me" is not the Same Cooke song that had been on the singles charts in 1957, but rather a Jimmy McHugh and Harold Adamson number written for the 1944 musical Four Jills in a Jeep. Dick Haymes sang it therein with the Dorsey band. This is a good example of a worthwhile song that isn't often heard these days.
Steve Allen's second best-known song is probably "Impossible," which David handles wonderfully. Teddi King's single version is available here.
"Can't Help It" was a new song that Allyn was apparently the first to record. It's a nice piece that doesn't deserve its obscurity. The authors were Marvin Fisher and Jack Segal.
| Not the Mississippi Sheiks' version |
"I'm Sitting on Top of the World" is a great title that spawned two songs - one by Walter Vinson and Lonnie Chatman of the Mississippi Sheiks, the other by Ray Henderson, Joe Young and Sam Lewis, the latter made popular by Al Jolson. David chose the second song and did well by it.
The Gershwins wrote "They All Laughed" for Shall We Dance, the Astaire-Rogers hit of 1937, where Ginger was the vocalist. Fred's commercial recording is here.
A terrific Rodgers and Hart song that isn't often heard is "Yours Sincerely," which comes from 1929 and the show Spring Is Here. David's sincerity is on full display in this one.
One song that is still performed today - although not as much as decades ago - is "Life Is Just a Bowl of Cherries." DeSylva, Brown and Henderson penned it for 1931's George White's Scandals and the young Ethel Merman.
La Merman also introduced "I've Got the Sun in the Morning" in Irving Berlin's huge 1946 hit Annie Get Your Gun.
Finally, the LP's title tune, which is another number from the Astaire-Rogers catalog. This one is by Irving Berlin and comes from 1936's Follow the Fleet. Fred's commercial recording is here.
LINK to Let's Face the Music and Dance
Yours Sincerely
For those of you who didn't read the introductory paragraphs, let me mention again that this is the same album as the one above, only reissued under a different name and cover in the 1970s - and reputedly with alternate takes.
I will tell you that the processing of this version was not all that good. The sound from vinyl was screechy and muddy, which I've adjusted. It now sounds as good as the original above.
LINK to Yours Sincerely
Harold Arlen: American Popular Song with Alec Wilder
| Alec Wilder |
In 1976, National Public Radio sponsored a series on the great American songwriters with the noted songwriter and author Alec Wilder (1907-80). The show's title was derived from Wilder's influential 1972 book American Popular Song: the Great Innovators, 1900-1950. The host and musical accompanist was pianist Loonis McGlohon (1921-2002).
Each episode of the program featured a notable vocalist. We recently heard David Allyn in the works of Jerome Kern. This second 1976 show is devoted to Harold Arlen.
Allyn conveniently starts his selections with "Hooray for Love," which also began the LP above. He follows this with "This Time the Dream's on Me," which Arlen and Johnny Mercer wrote for the film Blues in the Night. Wilder surprisingly professes to be unfamiliar with the piece, which is strange because it's hardly obscure. More to the point, it's a fantastic song, here most affectionately sung by Allyn.
"Let's Fall in Love" comes from the 1933 film of the same name, where it was sung by Art Jarrett. The composer himself recorded it at the time. (If you are interested as Arlen as a vocalist, I posted a set of 13 songs by him a few years ago.) Ted Koehler did the lyrics for this number.
| Loonis McGlohon with Charles Kuralt |
As mentioned on the show, "Last Night When We Were Young" is associated with Judy Garland. But it was introduced on records in 1936 by Lawrence Tibbett. He had been slated to sing it in the film Metropolitan, but it was unused. Yip Harburg wrote the words.
Garland did introduce "The Man Who Got Away" (here "The Gal That Got Away"), in the 1954 version of A Star Is Born. It's one of the great songs (and performances). Allyn does it well. Ira Gershwin was the lyricist.
Arlen and Harburg wrote "Down with Love" for the 1937 Ed Wynn show Hooray for What! David mentions that he recorded it years ago for an unreleased album. This LP was to be issued in 1979 as In the Blue of Evening, and it is coming up next in this series. Allyn's performance here is over-emphatic.
| No, Priscilla Lane did not sing 'Blues in the Night' |
The famed "Blues in the Night" comes from the 1941 film of the same name, where it was sung by William Gillespie and later reprised instrumentally. Johnny Mercer was the lyricist.
Mercer also worked on "Out of This World," the title song of an Eddie Bracken film of 1944. That's the one where Eddie is a messenger who can sing like Bing - and is dubbed by Crosby himself. It's a great song for sure, but David is a little unsteady here.
Wilder praises "My Shining Hour" to the heavens, and rightfully so. David includes the seldom heard verse, always welcome. This is one of the many songs introduced by Fred Astaire, in this case in the film The Sky's the Limit - where it's actually co-star Joan Leslie who sings the complete version of the song. Mercer was again the lyricist.
The program concludes with a Wilder-McGlohon number called "Saturday's Child," a nice song indeed.
As before, this program has been remastered and is completely tracked.
LINK to Harold Arlen: American Popular Song with Alec Wilder