I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me
Hey There!
Here's Fran Warren
Arranged and Conducted by Marty Paich
Hi-Fi TOPS L1585
1957
From the back cover: Fran Warren Sings – Tally 17 outstanding records; including 2 LP albums; 4 starring stage productions; 7 top theater bookings; 12 locations confined to the country's most glamorous night clubs and hotels; 10 spots in network television shows; 1 motion picture and you've got just 51 valid items attesting to Fran Warren's exalted show business perch today. But, such statistics constitute only one segment of this sassy lassie's career from The Bronx to Broadway.
Fran had been the mainstay in the vocal departments of three of the nation's great bands during the Forties the popular Art Mooney Orchestra; Charlie Barnet's great swinging musical organization of the period; and the superlative Claude Thornhill band. During that era when the road to success seemed rutted with unending one-night stands, shabby hotel rooms and the ever-waiting Greyhound bus, little did the pert Miss Warren figure that a scant ten years later her name would be emblazoned across the marquee of the Broadway theater wherein she was leading lady of the smash musical, Pajama Game. It seems only fitting that this album begins with a reprise of the hit tune, Hey There, from that show.
Yes, it's a long road back to Hoe and Bryant Avenues in the Bronx and the basement clubhouses where Fran and the other neighborhood kids pooled their nickels to buy the latest jazz records. Friday and Saturday nights they would get together for a little dancing, a little necking and a lot of listening to Goodman, Shaw, Barnet, Ellington, Basie – all the musical greats of the time. Thus, it developed that Fran Warren realized above all else that she wanted to be a singer. After quitting high school in her second year because, as she puts it, "I preferred to concentrate on the works of Sidney Bechet and Duke Ellington rather than plane geometry and medieval history", Fran sang with a variety of small bands around the New York area until 1945 when she landed her first big job as vocalist with Art Mooney's band. On joining the group, her voice was basically good but quite raw. She had had no coaching or training of any kind – just plenty of nerve and a natural sense of timing, phasing and good musical taste born of many, many hours of concentrated listening to the finest popular and jazz singers of the day.
Thanks to airshots three nights a week from the Lincoln and Capitol hotels where the Mooney band played, Fran attracted a good deal of attention from both the listening public and influential persons in the music business. Some months later this payed off when she received an offer to sing with the Charlie Barnet band. Never an unsure young woman, she grasped the opportunity. At last Fran was singing with the kind of band she had dreamed of. Moreover, for the first time she was seeing a lot of the country. People liked what she sang and the way she sang. Most important, this job provided her with incalculably sound experience. For despite all the inconvenience of working with a traveling band and the erratic life that inevitably attends it – Fran's musical maturation was steady and discernible. Then, one evening during the Barnet band's engagement at a New York night club, there was a tempestuous flareup onstand between Fran and Barnet. The band had just returned from a grueling road trip and nerves were mucho sensitive. The leader had bawled out the singer over some actually trivial matter and when she sang her chorus Fran retorted with words of her own that weren't included in the original song lyrics. Net result was one of those "You're fired/I quit" situations, and so Fran departed the Barnet band.
Within a week, however, Miss Warren had accepted a new berth with the Claude Thornhill Orchestra. This was a more subdued aggregation with accent on colorful arrangements and the leader's quiet piano. Fran's work with Thornhill was of enormous value in terms of preparing her for the demanding vocal roles she was yet to play in the course of her ascending career. Claude saw in her the makings of a great popular singer. He worked hard with Fran, taught her a great deal in voice control and dynamics. Before long she began to emerge as a fine stylist in her own right. In the two years she sang with the Thornhill band, La Warren was featured on about 19 recordings, starting with Sunday Kind Of Love, that have become recognized as some of the best popular records qualitatively speaking of the past 10 years.
The writing on the wall was clearly defined: The time was ripe for Fran Warren to venture forth as a single. So, bidding an affectionate adios to Claude Thornhill, she began to build a new career for herself. There was much to learn anew. She had to know how to hold an audience for 40 minutes or more and leave 'em begging for an encore how to choose the right songs and how to present them arrangements - pacing poise dress. Most vital was her acquisition of that rather indefinable quality called "stage presence" that comes to a perfectly finished performer, the sum of justifiable self confidence.
All this took some years to accomplish, but the obvious results were worth the hard work. Today Fran is more than just one of the best popular singers of her age, she is an artist of rare eclat. After 16 weeks with the Danny Kaye Show at New York's Palace Theater, the great comedian paid her high praise well earned. "Musical comedy needed Fran", said Kaye, "just as her own career needed musical comedy to reach the height of her own ambitions".
MARTY PAICH – The brilliant orchestrations written for Miss Warren in this Tops Records album were scored by one of the brightest arranging talents of the age. Marty Paich has been active mostly on the West Coast for a number of years. He has written and arranged many compositions played and sung by top performers in the business and is recognized as one of the leaders in the newer experi- mental school of jazz expression.
In addition to the thoroughly rehearsed string section accompanying Miss Warren throughout half this album, Paich chose as members of the smaller group such outstanding Hollywood musicians as multi-instrumentalist, Bob Enevoldsen; trumpeter, Don Fagerquist; bassist, Buddy Clark; and drummer, Mell Lewis. The conductor-arranger is at the piano throughout.
Hey There
Imagination
I Can't Believe That You're In Love With me
I Can't Get Started With You
Don't Blame Me
Exactly Like You
They Can't Take That Away From Me
Come Rain Or Come Shine
I'm In The Mood For Love
You Don't Know What Love Is
Lucky New People In Love
Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered
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