Bobby Darin - The Very Best Of Bobby Darin [Remastered] (2006)

Posted By: franklee

Bobby Darin - The Very Best Of Bobby Darin [Remastered]
Label: Warner | Year: 2006 | Genre: Rock/Pop | MP3 | 192 kBit/s | 93 MB

Artist: Bobby Darin
Title: The Very Best Of Bobby Darin
Label: Warner Music Benelux (Australia)
Type: Greatest Hits Collection, Remastered
Released: Oct 31, 2006
Genre: Rock/Pop, Easy Listening
Discs: 1
Format: MP3
Bitrate: 192 kBit/s
Channels: Joint Stereo
Samplerate: 44100
Length: 1:00:56
Covers: Front, Back, CD

All Music:
There's been considerable discussion about whether Bobby Darin should be classified as a rock roll singer, a Vegas hipster cat, an interpreter of popular standards, or even a folk rocker. He was all of these and none of these. Throughout his career he made a point of not becoming committed to any one style at the exclusion of others; at the height of his nightclub fame he incorporated a folk set into his act. When it appeared he could have gone on indefinitely as a sort of junior version of Frank Sinatra, he would periodically record pop/rock and folk rock singles whose principal appeal lay outside of the adult pop market. At one point he started calling himself Bob Darin and recorded songs with vague anti-establishment overtones that could be said to be biting the largely bourgeois hands that fed his highest paying gigs. It may be most accurate to say that Darin was, above all, a singer who wanted to do a lot of things, rather than make his mark as a particular stylist. That may have cost him some points as far as making it to the very top of certain genres, but also makes his work more versatile than almost any other vocalist of his era.

When Darin had his first hits in the late '50s, he was a teen idol of sorts, albeit a teen idol with much more talent and mature command than the typical singer in that style. The novelty tinged "Splish Splash" was his breakthrough smash, followed by "Queen of the Hop" and the ballad "Dream Lover." There was a slight RB feel to Bobby's delivery that may well have influenced RBpop/rock singers such as Dion, though it would be an exaggeration to call Darin a blueeyed soul man. In late 1959, he found a new direction when the swinging "Mack the Knife," a tune from BrechtWeill's +Threepenny Opera musical, made number one. The song came from an album of pop standards, heralding his move toward light big band jazz, which was consolidated by the Top Ten success of "Beyond the Sea" in 1960.

In the early '60s, Darin had mostly abandoned rock for the adult pop market, becoming a huge success on the Vegas nightclub circuit, and moving into the all round entertainer mode with starring roles in movies (including one as a non-singing jazz musician in John Cassavetes' Too Young Blues). He also continued to score regular hits with the likes of "You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby," "Things," and "Lazy River." To keep people guessing, there was also a hit cover of "What'd I Say" and some country tunes (one of which, "You're the Reason I'm Living," made it to number three on the pop charts). Around 1963, he put a folk section into his nightclub act that employed guitarist Roger McGuinn, then a couple of years away from fame as the leader of the Byrds.

Darin didn't make the expected retreat into Rat Pack land when his records stopped making the upper reaches of the charts in the mid'60s. In 1965, there was a rather nice self-penned jangly folk rocker, "When I Get Home," that become a British hit for the Searchers. Another 1965 flop, "We Didn't Ask to Be Brought Here," was an unexpected antiwar tune. When he made his return to the Top Ten in late 1966, it was with a cover of a gentle Tim Hardin folkrock song, "If I Were a Carpenter." His final Top 40 hit the following year, "Lovin' You," opted for material by another major folkrock composer, John Sebastian.

Darin may indeed have been far hipper and more politically aware than the average nightclub act, covering tunes by Dylan and the Rolling Stones, participating in a 1965 civil rights march to Alabama, and penning some Dylan-influenced songs of his own in the late '60s. It doesn't seem accurate to say that this was the true Bobby Darin, shedding his showbiz skin for something that came to him more naturally; in 1967, the same year he covered Jagger/Richards' "Back Street Girl," he also recorded material for an album entitled Bobby Darin Sings Doctor Dolittle. By the early '70s he working Vegas and similar joints again, exchanging his blue jeans for a tuxedo, and hosting a TV variety series. In a much odder turn of events, he was now recording for Motown, though these efforts met little success.

Afflicted with a rheumatic heart, Darin was always aware that his time might be limited, and he died near the end of 1973 during open heart surgery. He left behind a considerable quantity (and diversity) of recorded work, and underwent a critical re-evaluation of sorts, especially among rock critics, which might have aided his election to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990. A 1996 four CD box set, divided into thematic discs, attempted to put his wide ranging efforts into perspective. In 2004, actor Kevin Spacey starred as Bobby Darin in the feature film biography Beyond the Sea. Spacey also directed the film and sang Darin's songs for the film, which were released as the film's soundtrack. - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

Tracks

01 - Mack The Knife
02 - Beyond The Sea
03 - Don't Rain On My Parade
04 - Dream Lover
05 - Baby Face
06 - Lazy River
07 - Nature Boy
08 - Clementine
09 - Won't You Come Home Bill Bailey
10 - Things
11 - Multiplication
12 - Splish Splash
13 - You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby
14 - That's All
15 - It's You Or No One
16 - All The Way Home
17 - Guys And Dolls
18 - Minnie The Moocher
19 - Two Of A Kind
20 - That's The Way Love Is
21 - How About You
22 - It Had To Be You
23 - Darlin' Be Home Soon
24 - If I Were A Carpenter

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