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The
Ultimate John Barry
EMI
7243 5 35934 2 1
Geoff
Leonard
EMI
have just issued yet another John Barry compilation, this time
calling it 'The Ultimate John Barry'. Of course it is far from
being that, but it is a fairly interesting mix of tracks ranging
from the sublime (Cutty Sark) to the ridiculous (Twelfth Street
Rag). The full track listing is:
1.
Walk Don't Run
2.
Beat For Beatniks
3.
Blues For Beatniks
4.
Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White
5.
Hit And Miss
6.
It Doesn't Matter Anymore
7.
Black Stockings
8.
Get Lost Jack Frost
9.
Blueberry Hill
10. Volare
11. Cutty Sark
12. Keep A Walkin'
13. I'll Be With You In Apple Blossom Time
14. The Stripper
15. The James Bond Theme
16. Diamonds Are Forever - Shirley Bassey
17. Goldfinger - Shirley Bassey
18. Mr Kiss Kiss Bang Bang - Shirley Bassey
19. The Magnificent Seven
20. Midnight Cowboy
21. Never Let Go
22. Unchained Melody
23. Spanish Harlem
24. Twelfth Street Rag
Listening
to this compilation brings home just how much Vic Flick contributed
to the success of John Barry’s early career. I haven’t counted,
but I reckon his guitar features prominently on two-thirds of
these tracks, and is quite probably present on most of the others,
too!
When
I originally told John EMI was going to release his recording
of ‘Unchained Melody’, he told me he had never recorded it!
What he did record was a vocal version by Johnny De Little which
he arranged and accompanied. The latter is included on ‘John
Barry – The Hits & The Misses’, and although I’ve not compared
the two, it does seem possible that he simply took his orchestral
backing track and added a solo saxophone in place of the vocal.
Anyway,
as I was looking through the list I saw ‘Keep A Walkin'’ as the
12th track. I knew the title but only as the 'B' side of a single
released by an obscure singer called Tony Rocco, which JB did
accompany back in ‘62. In fact, we included the A-side, ‘Stalemate’,
on ‘The Hits & The Misses’.
So,
I thought maybe there was an orchestral version of this song available,
although as JB didn't write it, that seemed unlikely. On playing
it, it *is* the Tony Rocco vocal but according to the credit,
EMI appear to think it's a JB7 track! Maybe it’s not that important
but it seems amazing to me that a company like EMI can release
a CD like that, and include a wrong track. Because, I can't see
how they could have meant to include it - it sticks out like a
sore thumb, amongst the only other vocals – all by Shirley Bassey!!
The
booklet has four pages of sleeve notes by Chris White. They are
certainly good enough for a basic guide to John Barry but reveal
nothing new to the committed fan. No photos are included, save
for the quite striking images of John on the cover, but remember
this is at best a mid-priced release.
Geoff
Leonard |