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Harold Sings Arlen (With Friend)
Studio album by
Released1966
Recorded1966
Genre Traditional pop, jazz
Label Columbia OL 2920 [1]
Producer Thomas Z. Shepard

Harold Sings Arlen (With Friend) is a 1966 vocal album by the composer Harold Arlen with arrangements by Peter Matz. Arlen is accompanied on two songs by Barbra Streisand. [2] This was Arlen's only album on which he performed as a singer. [3]

Chris Colfer and Lea Michele performed Matz's arrangement of " Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead" from the album in a 2011 episode of Glee. [4]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic [2]

The initial Billboard review from April 16, 1966 said that Arlen "...has a way with a vocal that's quite winning" and that "his manner is soft but persuasive". The album was one of Billboards 'Pop Special Merit Picks' for the week. [5]

William Ruhlmann reviewed the album for Allmusic and wrote that Arlen "proves he can carry a tune" on the album but "Arlen's modest singing voice doesn't quite justify the treatment" of a fully orchestrated album though he sings the lyrics with "feeling and understanding". [2]

Streisand's vocal on "House of Flowers" has been particularly praised; Arlen's biographer Edward Jablonski described it as a "classic" and Billboard wrote that it was a "knockout". [3]

Track listing

All songs composed by Harold Arlen, with lyricists indicated
  1. " Blues in the Night" ( Johnny Mercer) – 3:55
  2. "Little Biscuit" ( E.Y. "Yip" Harburg) – 3:54
  3. " Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead" (Harburg) – 1:54
  4. " A Sleepin' Bee" ( Truman Capote) – 3:39
  5. "In the Shade of the New Apple Tree" (Harburg) – 4:02
  6. " Hit the Road to Dreamland" (Mercer) – 2:35
  7. " Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive" (Mercer) – 2:37
  8. " My Shining Hour" (Mercer) – 3:21
  9. "Today I Love Everybody" ( Dorothy Fields) – 2:08
  10. " House of Flowers" (Capote) – 2:43
  11. "For Every Man There's a Woman" ( Leo Robin) – 2:25
  12. "That's a Fine Kind O' Freedom" ( Martin Charnin) – 2:39

Personnel

References

  1. ^ "Harold Arlen – Harold Sings Arlen (With Friend) (Vinyl, LP)". discogs.com. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Harold Sings Arlen (With Friend) at AllMusic
  3. ^ a b Edward Jablonski (September 1998). Harold Arlen: Rhythm, Rainbows, and Blues. University Press of New England. ISBN  978-1-55553-366-3.
  4. ^ Danielle Birkett; Dominic McHugh (4 December 2018). The Wizard of Oz: Musical Adaptations from Baum to MGM and Beyond. Oxford University Press. p. 226. ISBN  978-0-19-066317-9.
  5. ^ "Special Merit Picks: Pop Special Merit". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 16 April 1966. p. 42.