Between 1971 & 1974 veteran easy listening star Andy Williams was mining a particular rich seam of form. Three of the albums he put out on the Columbia label during this period ('Love Story', 'Solitaire', and 'The Way We Were') form something of a trilogy his fans not only bought by the shed load (they all went Billboard Top 10) but were also critically well received.
His choice of material (Williams was a great interpreter of others work as well as having bespoke stuff written for him) was razor sharp: he was equally at home with a tight band format as he was with the lush, string heavy, orchestral arrangements that became his trademark. On 1973's Solitaire, for instance, among the musicians credited were Klaus Voorman on bass, Nicky Hopkins on piano and Jim Keltner on drums.
I could wax lyrical about all the songs on each of these albums (buy me a drink next time you see me and I'll probably do precisely that). In the meantime I'm just going to pin the tail on the the donkey and give you one cut from each which probably encapsulates the essence of what this troika was all about.
1971's Love Story is middle of the road nirvana. Rose Garden and (Where Do I Begin) Love Story sit check by jowl with James Taylor's Fire and Rain and George Harrison's Something and My Sweet Lord. However, I've gone with a typically jaunty version of I Think I Love You which had put David Cassidy and the Partridge Family on the map earlier that year.
Solitaire was probably his most diverse album including as it did material from Nilsson, Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder. I've gone for his interpretation of another George Harrison song - That is All (from George's Living in the Material World) a love song addressed to a woman and/or a deity (typical George) that Williams expertly wraps his vocal chords around.
The Way We Are from 1974 is probably the seminal Williams platter (it was in my parents' record collection and I'm guessing that's where a lot of people came across it. And who was the mystery woman locked in his embrace? My money was always on the oriental girl on the Mastermind board game box). As well as the title track, Killing Me Softy and Touch Me in the Morning, it was the mid 70s and maybe Williams could see that the tide was turning; with disco fast approaching, Williams rather adventurously covered the vocal version of Love Unlimited Orchestra's soul and funk workout 'Love's Theme'. A master stroke.
★
Andy Williams (1927-2012)
I shall have to delve in a little deeper now. Never fashionable, never cool, that may be - but I will forever have fond childhood memories of the Andy Williams Show and Cookie Bear!
ReplyDeleteCookie Bear is ringing bells but it may be a false memory (I may have to Google and spoil the illusion). He also 'discovered' the Osmonds. Cookie Bear and the Osmonds - pretty impressive CV, huh?
DeleteAlways liked Andy's voice. Very mellifluous!
ReplyDeleteLike C I remember his Show on telly when I was young. Probably why he got stuck with the uncool tag but good to see you championing him.
The cool tag is neither here nor there. I must admit I used to listen to him ironically. Now I just listen to him.
DeleteMellifluous always sounds like it should be a barbed comment, but it's really not (we both know that); 'pleasingly smooth' really does hit the N on the H in Williams' case.