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Friday, June 24, 2022

Mr. Guitar - Tony Mottola

 

Boulevard Of Broken Dreams

Tony Mottola
Mr. Guitar
Conceived and Reproduced for Two-Fers by Don Thorn
Illustration: Laurel Michel
Graphic Coordination: Alan Sekuler
Album Design: Ruby Mazur
ABC Records ABCX 770/2  (Previously Issued In Other Albums)
1973

Espana Cani
Boulevard Of Broken Dreams
Cuando Caliente El Sol
Guadalajara
Carnival Of Venice
Cauaquinho
Fly Me To The Moon
C'est Si Bon
Girl From Ipanema
Let's Fall In Love
Mimi
He's Gone Away
On Top Of Old Smokey
La Vien Rose
Guaglione
Under Paris Skies
Lullaby De Espana
Baile De Venezuela
Aneme E Core
Mexican Medley

Signs Of Love And Things - Gene Barry

Bruke's Law

Gene Berry
Star Of "Burke's Law," 
Sings Of Love And Things
Album produced by Joe Reisman for RCA Victor and Alfred Perry for Four Star Television
Recorded in RCA Victor's Music Center of the World, Hollywood, California
Recording Engineer: Jim Malloy
Cover Photo by Sheedy and Long
Liner Photos by Chester Maydole
RCA Victor RD-7714 (LPM-2975)
Product of The Decca Record Company Ltd., London
1964

From the back cover: As Amos Bruke, the millionaire captain of homicide in Four Star Television's "Bruke's Law," Gene Barry has accumulated the praise of critics and the light-hearted envy of millions of TV viewers. His calm, elegant manner has led Gene to be singled out as a detective most everybody would love to have in the home – and does, once a week.

That's one view of Gene Barry – Gene Barry the television star. Now there's a chance to see – or more correctly, hear – his flip side. Gene Barry, the musical comedy star who wows night club audiences and who set Las Vegas on its ear in "Destry Rides Again," has also appeared in such leading night clubs as the Palmer House in Chicago, the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco, the Latin Quarter in New York, Cork Club in Houston and the outstanding clubs in South America such as the Copa in Rio. When you listen to the appealing songs Gene has recorded for this album, you naturally ask yourself the question, "Why hasn't Gene Barry recorded an album like this sooner?" Well, Four Star Television's president, Tom BcDermott, once asked a similar question and promptly set about answering it! That is why Gene was not only signed as the star of "Burke's Law," but was also considered a winner as a singer – a singing performer for whom Four Star wanted the best. The next move was to RCA Victor, who also appreciated Mr. Barry's vocal talents and decided to put out an album of his songs and let the record-buying pubic be the final judge.


What better combination is there than the rich baritone voice of Gene Barry blended with his unusual vocal styling of Just In Time, the pulsating Day In, Day Out or the melodic A Perfect Paris Night, written especially for him by Hoagy Carmichael.

Actually, singing has always come naturally to the tall and handsome actor, even if his long-time role as TV's Bat Masterson and his success as Amos Burke primarily call to mind a soft-speaking actor who carries a walloping Nielsen rating. It's this way: Gene Barry started as a singer. It was on radio station WHN in New York that Barry broke into show business. Subsequent jobs as a band vocalist and in night clubs provided Gene with a solid musical background from which he made his stage debut in the Broadway musical "Rosalinda." Proving his ability on the stage, Gene came to Hollywood, signed a contract with Paramount Pictures and starred in such movies as "War Of The Worlds," "Soldier Of Fortune," "Back From Eternity" and "Thunder Road." Then came Bat Masterson and the rest is TV history.

Now, new history is about to be written for "Gene Barry Sings" is guilty of providing entertainment in the first degree. If you have any doubts, you'll find it listed under enjoyment in "Of Love And Things." – Dick Israel

Just In Times
It's All Right With Me
The Sweetest Sounds
Day In, Day Out
I'll Be Seeing You
The Prisoner's Song
Oh, Lady Be Good
Let Me Love You
Make Someone Happy
Burke's Law
A Perfect Paris Night
Life Is Just A Bowl Of Cherries

El Condor Pasa - James Last

 

Happy Brasilia

El Pasa Condor 
James Last
Produced by James Last
Photography: Joel Brodsky
Art Direction: David Krieger
Polydor 24-4509 STEREO
1970

Cecilia
Once On A Sunday Morning (Cuando Sali De Cuba)
Blowin' In The Wind
Kumbayah 
Let's Get Together 
Happy Brasilia
El Condor Pasa
Washington Square
Proud Mary
John Kanaka
Mademoiselle Ninette
Give Peace A Chance

50 Guitars Go Italiano - Tommy Garrett

 

Arrivederci, Roma

50 Guitars Go Italiano
The 50 Guitars Of Tommy Garrett
Producer: Tommy "Snuff" Garrett
Arranger: Erine Freeman
Engineer: Eddie Brackett
Cover Design and Photography: Studio Five
Liberty Records - Premier Poly 120 Sound LSS 14028
1964

O Solo Mio
Al-Di-La
Summertime In Venice
Non Dimenticar
Return To Me
Love Theme From "La Strada
Volare
Came Back To Sorrento
Mattinata
Ciao, Ciao Bambina
Anema E Core
Arrivederci, Roma

Thursday, June 23, 2022

Larry Elgart And His Orchestra

 

Bigwin

Larry Elgart And His Orchestra
Recorded in Webster Hall, New York City, November 11, 13 and 18, 1958
Recording Engineer: Ernest Oelrich
Produced by Lee Schapiro
RCA Victor LPM 1961
1959

Larry Elgart's Secret

Recently a leading national magazine brooded over the riddle that the founder of the nation's most acclaimed dance band, Larry Elgart, also seemed to have a monopoly on discriminating high fidelity fans, as if to imply a contradiction. That "far and away the best recorded sound..." come in the form of music for dancing, instead of cricket mating calls or Australian aborigines, munching moistened crackers, proved a shocking discovery for many so-called experts. Originally embattled minority, lover of exquisite recorded sound came to look among non-musical expressions for that extraordinary precision and refinement of sound by which their carefully assembled equipment could be employed to full advantage. Musicians, it was felt, and for the most part it was a correct assessment, were either not sophisticated enough in theory of electronic sound reproduction or, worse yet, inclined to view preoccupation with techniques and theories of the science of sound as a kind of artistic heresy, as if to say it was not the business of artist to trouble over the means or the quality of the ultimate impression delivered to the listener – that was the problem of engineers.

The original contribution Larry Elgart made was the discovery, back in 1945, that the artistic product achieved "live" could not be delivered in electronic reproduction with any dependable degree of verisimilitude by a naive reliance upon the miracle of modern equipment. Even at that time, the band he had conceived and organized, fronted by brother Les, won the top-ranking position among ballroom dancing aficionados. Thus it was astounding for Larry to discover that the non-dancing public was hearing something deplorably different, via the broadcasts, that the sound entering the microphones on the location. Leaning back confidently one day to listen to an "air-check" (a recording taken from their broadcast), the youthful perfectionist got the shock of his life, and resolved to learn all that could be known about the nature of sound, concluding that the "Elgart Sound" was something different, not only from listener to listener, but according to where and by what means you happened to hear it.

Fired with zeal to correct the inequities, Larry began seeking a "justice in sound." He experimented in ballroom and other "live" performance locations to reduce the difference between the conception of the sound and the esthetically diminished realization. These experiments, especially in the first groping stages, took on some pretty weird appearances. There was the time in New Jersey, when a jam-packed house of dumbfounded dancers watched Larry and a crew of workmen building a plywood semicircular wall behind the band. It was nowhere near as effective as earlier, when during rehearsals he had put the wall in front of the band.

There was much still to be done. So much for improvements, most often over the protesting heads of ballroom owners, one of whom grumbled "someday this guy will completely bury the band from sight in a forest of goofy shapes of woods and chicken-wire inventions!" Now there remained the challenge of recorded and radio sound. Larry Elgart became one of the pioneers in the exploration of the wilderness of outer sound. Examining the capacities of various apparatus, mikes, etc., Larry isolated the variable elements in the chain of reproduced sound – the original conception itself; the arrangements; studio interpretations; monitoring; and modifications of the placement of mikes and musicians. In the ensuing decade and a half, the "Elgart Sound" has become the synonym for brilliant achievement in listening pleasure.

Last year, Les left the band to pursue his own musical notions. Satisfied that RCA recording approach was, like his own, searchingly self-improving, Larry brought his consummate dance band to the Victor label. The first issue of that fortuitous union is in your hands now. – Wally Robinson

From Billboard - February 23, 1959: This package is an experience in listening pleasure. Sound-wise, it is exquisite – true high fidelity stereo; and a nod of appreciation must be given Elgart, engineer Ernest Oelrich and producer Lee Schapiro. Tunes are "Once In Love With Amy," "Beyond The Blue Horizon," "Heartaches," etc. Interesting liner notes by Wally Robinson are informative with regard to Elgart's search for true sound reproduction.

Once In Love With Amy
No Fool Like An Old Fool
You Turned The Tables On Me
Midnight Sun
Dreamboat
Beyond The Blue Horizon
Quincy Hoppers
Are You Living', Old Man?
That Old Feeling
Sunday Drive
Heartaches 
Bigwin

In A Spanish Mood - Al Caiola

 

Malagueña

Al Caiola
In A Spanish Mood
Design: Lumel / Whiteman Studios
Illustration: Murry Whiteman
ARC Records
Accord Record Corporation SJA 7920
1982

Malagueña
Granada
Cielito Lindo
El Relicario
Tico Tico
Espana Cani
La Paloma
Noche De Ronda

Anytime - Eddy Arnold

 

Anytime

Anytime
Eddy Arnold and His Guitar
RCA Victor LPM 1224
1956

From the back cover: Eddy has loved country music since he was a little boy in Chester County in western Tennessee. Youngest son of a cotton and corn farmer, he liked music better than farm work – but that did not keep him from working behind the plow. He had his full share of work to do, and he did it well. The nearest town was six miles away ("I walked both ways"), and Eddy had his schooling in a one-room frame building where the only teacher taught all eight grades.

When he was eight, he got hold of an old mouth harp; "the only toy," Eddy recalls, "I ever owned." He taught himself to play it, while sitting before a battered old phonograph listening to Jimmie Rodgers sing T For Texas and T For Tennessee.

A turning point in his life came when a cousin lent him an old guitar. His mother could play a little, but soon Eddie had taught himself to be a better player than she was. Eddy's dreams of a musical career were cut short by his father's death, which made it necessary for him to quit school an to work full time on the farm.

But when he was eighteen he got a job playing with a band in Jackson – which later played at the local radio station. Two years later the band went to play on a larger station in Memphis, but the job lasted only a few weeks. Eddy went to St. Louis – to visit a married sister – and landed a job at KWK. It was from there that he went to his vocalist job with Pee Wee King.

He began his stellar career with his own outfit, "Eddy Arnold and His Tenessee Plowboys." As his fame spread, he signed a contract with RCA Victor and made his first record – since a favorite of his fans – Mommy, Please Stay Home With Me. Within a year after he began recording, he had no less than three records on the juke box hit parade at one time.

Now known to millions more from his movie, radio and TV appearances, Eddy has come a long way from the little farm in Chester Country.

Bouquet Of Roses
It's A Sin
That's How Much I Love You
Don't Rob Another Man's Castle
Rockin' Alone (In An Old Rocking Chair)
Molly Darling
I'll Hold You In My Heart (Till I Can Hold You In My Arms)
A Heart Full Of Love (For A Handful Of Kisses)
Anytime
Texarkana Baby
Will The Circle Be Unbroken (My Family Circle)
Who At My Door Is Standing

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Uniquely Mancini - Henry Mancini

 

C Jam Blues

Uniquely Mancini
Henry Mancini
Produced by Joe Reisman
Associate Producer: Al Schmitt
Music Arranged by Henry Mancini
Recorded in RCA Victor's Music Center Of The World, Hollywood, California
Recording Engineer: Jim Malloy
1963

Personnel:

Trumpets - Conrad Gozz (Lead), Frank Beach, Ray Triscari, Pete Candoli (Soloist), Conte Candoli (Soloist), Don Fagerquist (Flugelhorn Soloist)

Trombones - Dick Nash (Soloist), Jimmy Priddy, John Halliburton, George Roberts (Bass Trombone)

French Horns - Vincent De Rosa (Soloist), Richard Perissi, John Cave, Arthur Maebr

Woodwinds - Ted Nash (Alto & Alto Flute Soloist), Ronny King (Alto Flute Soloist), Harry Klee, Gene Cipriano, Plas Johnson (Tenor Sax Soloist)

Rhythm - Jack Sperling (Drums), Rollt Bundock (Bass), Bob Bain (Guitar), Jimmy Rowles (Piano), Larry Bunker (Vibes & Marimba), Bobby Helfer (Orchestra Manager)

Green Onions 
Stairway To The Stars
Night Train
Lullaby Of Birdland
Chelsea Bridge
C Jam Blues
Banzai Pipeline
Rhapsody In Blue
Cheers!
Lonesome
The Hot Canary
Moonlight Serenade

Someday My Prince Will Come - Miles Davis

 

Old Folks

Someday My Prince Will Come
Miles Davis Sextet
Produced by Teo Macero
Cover Photo: Columbia Records Photo Studio - Bob Cato
Back Cover Photo: Vernon Smith
Columbia Records CS 8456
1962

Personnel:

John Coltrane
Hank Mobley
Wynton Kelly
Paul Chambers
Jimmy Cobb

From Billboard - January 20, 1962: The top-selling modern jazz trumpeter has another fine set here which should draw healthy sales. The group is in the most successful Davis mold with extended choruses by Miles, and tenor saxist Hank Mobley and John Coltrane. The Coltrane name, incidentally, should add to the pulling power of the set. It was with Davis that he first gained widespread recognition. Pianist Wynton Kelly is another fine performer on the album. Besides the title tune, the groups plays "I Thought About You," three originals, and "Old Folks."

Someday My Prince Will Come
Old Folks
Pfrancing
Drad-Dog
Teo
I Thought About You

Monday, June 20, 2022

Hot Pennies - Red Nichols

 

Row, Row, Row

Hot Pennies
Red Nichols
Capitol Records T775
1957

From the back cover: For 30 years, Red has been recording the music he loves most dearly – American jazz. He was a famous leader at 16, and at 19 was the trumpet-tooting boss of men like Glenn Miller, Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw and other hot virtuosi of eminence.

Nichols' famed "Five Pennies" waxed scores of hit records, his orchestra played in the pits of a dozen memorable Broadway musical shows, and radio broadcasts throughout the 1920's and 1930's further established the skilled horn man from Ogden, Utah, as an international favorite. Red's abrupt decision in 1942 to abandon music, take a welding job in the Oakland shipyards an remain under the same roof every night with his polio-stricken daughter, is a story that is perhaps without equal in American popular music.

Millions were stirred by the story in October, 1956, when Red was the subject of a "This Is Your Life" program. And in December of the same year, Paramount began the motion picture production of the Nichols story at a cost of $3,000,00.

Here, in "Hot Pennies," Red is showcased in a long-play album recorded in true hi-fi for the first time in his career.

Surrounding the leader are Bob Hammack,  piano; Abe Lincoln, King Jackson and Moe Schneider, trombones' Joe (Blizzard Gizzard) Rushton and his bass saxophone; Billy Wood and Heinie Beau, clarinets; Wayne Songer, alto saxophone; George Van Eps, guitar; Jack Ryan, string bass; Al Stevenson, piano (rhythm); and Rollie Culver, drums. There are no vocals. All selections were recorded in the Capitol Tower on September 7 and 10, 1956.

The tunes are all particularly identified with Nichols and his bright Pennies – have been for years. But essentially, this is a Nichols package, dominated by his punching trumpet and inspiring personality.

From Billboard - February 23, 1957: Nichols' film bio is on the way, and it figures to create interest in this package. Most of the numbers included here are famous Nichols vehicles from the Five Pennies' heyday in the late 1920's, and they've been updated somewhat. The style now may be called a modified Dixieland, with Nichols' cornet sparkling, and sounding better than ever in hi-fi. His colleagues aren't particularly distinguished as soloists, but the ensembles are okay. Dixie fans and nostalgic old-timers constitute your market. "Louisiana" and "Peg O' My Heart" are samples.

Louisiana 
Mood Indigo
Maple Leaf Rag
Peg O' My Heart
Marchin' With The Saints
Mama's Gone, Goodbye
Ida
Farewell Blues
Blues At Midnight
Row, Row, Row

Sunday, June 19, 2022

Sonny Rollins Brass

 

What's My Name?

Sonny Rollins Brass
Sonny Rollins Trio
Verve V6-8430
1962

Personnel on Side One: Sonny Rollins, tenor saxophone; Nat Adderley, cornet; Clark Terry, Reunald Jones, Ernie Royal, trumpets; Billy Byers, Jimmy Cleveland, Frank Rehak, trombones; Dick Katz, piano; Rene Thomas, guitar; Roy Haynes, drums; Henry Grimes, bass; Ernie Wilkins, conductor and arranger; Don Butterfield, tuba. Recorded in New York City, July 11, 1958, at Metropolitan Studios

Personnel on Side Two: Sonny Rollins, tenor saxophone; Charles Wright, drums; Henry Grimes, bass. Recorded in New York City, July 10, 1958, at Beltone Studios. Supervision Leonard Feather

From the back cover: In the chapter devoted to the story of the tenor saxophone in The Book Of Jazz I describe Sonny Rollins as "one of the most influential figures since Getz, fashioning his own work from a blend of Lester Young, Charlie Parker and possibly Coleman Hawkins.

It now appears that I was a trifle conservative. Theodore Walter Rollins is the most influential young figure in his field today; I believe he is a source of inspiration for even more young tenor saxophonists than was Sam Getz at the height of his influence (around 1950, the year after Stan left the Woody Herman band and began to win the music magazine polls). And the "possibly" qualification concerning the relationship between Rollins and Hawkins is expendable. There can be no doubt that the fully animated style and sanguine, coursing Rollins tone found some of its impulse in the work of that earliest of the tenor giants.

Rollins is a dedicated artist who discovery of a personal voice in jazz was the outgrowth of several years of concentrated, calculated experimentation. His first records, with Bats Gonzales in 1948 (only two years after he had switched from alto to tenor) reveal a degree of fluency commendable and at that time unusual for a 19-year-old. The later combo dates with Art Blakey and Gadd Dameron in 1949-50, with Bud Powell and Miles Davis in 1950-51, show a firmer, more confident sound and a great technical control of the horn. When he joined the combo led jointly by Max Roach and the late Clifford Brown, in January of 1956, Sonny found himself established for the first time in a setting that offered a perfect propulsive background, a rhythmically stimulating framework for which he now mature personality was strikingly well suited.

Rollin left Roach in the summer of 1957. By this time the word had spread; the brush-fire enthusiasm that rapidly gains fervor among jazzmen when a new talent is recognized had convinced him that he was ready for the role of leader.

Because he demands nothing less than complete sympathy from those working with him, and because the intense desire for self-expression sometimes is thwarted when he becomes merely one of the convention of soloists, Sonny soon found that the quintet format, no matter how valuable it had been during his days as a sideman with Roach, was not compatible with his desires as a leader. After a couple of weeks fronting a quintet he dropped the trumpet player; a week later he let the pianist go. Since that time he has worked almost exclusively with a trio, only occasionally letting down his defenses and admitting a pianist into the entourage. A bassist who walks the right notes with a firm, crisp tone can supply him with all the harmonic suggestion he needs, at the same time leaving him greater freedom to say anything he cares to on the horn without fear of contradiction.

For his first session Sonny decided to retain, on one side of his initial LP, the trio setting in which he has worked for the past year; on the other side he arranged to offer a contrasting session that would display his sound, for the first time, with a large orchestra.

The bassist on both sessions, trip and Big Brass, was Henry Alonzo Grimes. Born November 3, 1935 in Philadelphia, he is a member of an all-musical family; a twin brother plays tenor, his mother is a pianist and father a former trumpeter. Grimes studied at Juilliard, toured for a while with rhythm and blues bands, and in the past two years has gigged with Rollins, Tony Scott, Gerry Mulligan, Charles Mingus and with the Benny Goodman band at Newport.

Charles "Specs" Wright, drummer on the trio date, also a Philadelphian, born in 1927, and heard in 1949-50 with the Dizzy Gillespie band; in recent years he has toured with Earl Bostic, Cannonball Adderley and Carmen McRae.

The rhythm section on the big band date includes Dick Katz, who played in Sonny's quartet at Birdland; Roy Haynes, the drummer from Boston best known as part of Sarah Vanghan's accompaniment since 1953; and Grimes. Functioning occasionally as section and  but more significantly as soloist is the Belgian-born guitarist Rene Thomas, who now lives in Montreal but was in the U.S. in 1957 playing in a Rollins combo in a Philadelphia night club. Thomas is the favorite guitarist not only of Rollins but of many who heard him during their European travels before he emigrated to Canada a couple of years ago.

The personnel of the brass section is so strong is distinguished names that no elaboration is required here here. Though the men function solely as a backdrop, their musicianship is of a caliber that assured the kind of teamwork necessary for an interpretation of Ernie Wilkin's moving arrangements.

Wilkins, a member of the Hines, Basie and Gillespie saxophone sections until the demands for his services as an arranger made him too busy to play, was born in 1922 in St. Louis and arranged for the bands of Basie, Tommy Dorsey, Harry James, and for innumerable New York record sessions. Since Rollins had never previously been served by orchestrations this was of course Ernie's first opportunity to write for him, an association welcomed by both participants and brought to fruition after extensive consultations on the size, shape and nature of the setting Sonny had in mind for his big-band bow. – Leonard Feather

From Billboard - April 28, 1962: This album, originally issued on the metrojazz label in 1958, should do well as a result of all the new publicity on Sonny Rollins' return as a performer. The set features Rollins almost at the peak of his career in a flock of free-wheeling performances, including "Body & Soul," "Who Care?" and "Love Is A Simple Thing," both with trio and full ork. Good blowing here and good wax for the current market.

Who Cares?
Love Is A Simple Thing
Grand Street
Far Out West
What's My Name
If You Were The Only Girl In The World
Manhattan
Body & Soul

Organ In Hi Fi - Dick Aurandt

 

Stormy Weather

Organ In Hi Fi
Dick Aurandt At The Mighty Console
TOPS Records L1633
1959

From Billboard - April 6, 1959: Good listening package of organ music ably performed by organist Dick Aurandt. Tunes include such favorites as "I Surrender Dear," "Moonglow," "Fascination" and "Stormy Weather." Good rack material.

When It's Sleepy Time Down South
I Surrender Dear
I Can't Give You Anything But Love
Moonglow
Dancing Fiddles
Fascination
Smoke Rings
Mama Inez
Pyramid
Stormy Weather

Today's Hits In Jazz - Dave Pell

 

One Note Samba

The Dave Pell Octet Plays
Today's Hits In Jazz
An S. W. Production
Engineer: Bones Howe
Cover Design and Photography: Studio Five
Liberty Records LST-7298
1963

Meditation
Cast Your Fate Into The Wind
Walk Right In
Desafinado
A Taste Of Honey
One Note Samba
Love For Sale
Fly Me To The Moon
Little Bird
Our Day Will Come
I Wanna Be Around
Days Of Wine And Roses

Dixie In Hi Society - Barney Richards

 

Oh, Lady Be Good

Dixie In Hi Society
Barney Richards and His Rebels
Mercury Records MG 20508
1960

From the back cover: Each tune in this album is truly a product of years of working over. Richards never uses an arraignment on an engagement, but each time they play the number, Barney feels there's some refurbishment made and an improvement occurs. He personally feels this is the cream of over 400 tunes the band does regularly.

Oh, Lady Be Good
I Found A Million Dollar Baby
Mountain Greenery
You Took Advantage Of Me
Mournin' Blues
Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home
'S Wonderful
The Blue Room
Thou Swell
Someone To Watch Over Me
Just In Time
C'est Magnifique

Michelle - Caravelli

 

Michelle

Michelle
a la Caravelli and His Magnificent Strings
Cover Photo: Herb Brever
Columbia Records CL 2524
1966

If I Had A Hammer
Michelle
What Now My Love
Cuando Calienta El Sol
Calcutta
Desafinado
Yesterday
What's New Pussycat?
I Wish You Love
Dio, Come Ti Amo!
Marionettes

Do-It-Yourself - Peter Barclay

 

Alone

Do-It-Yourself
Music For Gracious Living 
Peter Barclay And His Orchestra
Photograph: Hedrich-Blessing
Columbia Records CL 698
1955

From Billboard - October 15, 1955: There rarely comes a series that invites display as does this one. The covers are full color photos of a type right out of "Better Homes And Gardens," each dealing with a form of modern home entertainment and avocation. On the back of each jacket is useful, easy to follow information – recipes for snacks, drinks, patio planting, dance music suggestions and remodeling hints. The music itself is standard background music, the usual "mood" or "dinner" music, consisting of standards, and very well recorded. The packaging is bound to call attention to the entire series, and the music, while interchangeable, is perfectly suitable for background for all of the above functions.

Alone
Because
The Stars Will Remember
Villa
Parlez-moi d' amour
Anniversary Waltz
Masquerade
Forever And Ever
My Hero
I'm Falling In Love With Someone
You Belong To My Heart
Indian Love Call