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The same thing kept Make Believe It’s Your First Time from being played on pop radio stations that earlier played Touch Me When We’re Dancing.
I think "Your Baby" should have been the first single. It had the old school power and awesome arrangement.
I agree with the sediment of Your Baby Doesn't Love You Anymore, but I did hear it on the radio where I lived at the time in Rome, Georgia. I thought I saw it get around number 84 on Billboard and then Billboard had a nugget inside the magazine that said Made in America had 5 singles as A Song for You had 5 singles, with each being in the top 100 about 10 years apart and that was some kind of a first statistic, or something like that? I don't recall hearing it on any other station around. I was curious at the time if it was just a radio single. Later on, I think You're the One was also a radio single and I new a few who bought Lovelines after hearing it on the radio. I was in Atlanta by then. Then there was Honolulu City Lights which never needed the chorale on it. I never heard it on the radio but I did call a radio station about it and he gave me the radio station single with the cover. I treasured that at the time, but passed it on to a friend who never had seen it who lived in another city. I am sure Harry can fix any of this if I am misinformed about the radio single accuracy. Back in the day, it was hard to get cold facts."Your Baby Doesn't Love You Anymore" was the first song from VOICE OF THE HEART to jump out at me. I liked it well enough to play over and over again. Couldn't get enough of it. So to me it almost has that "well-worn" single feel about it, even though I never, ever heard it on the radio.
I agree with Two Lives but I still think it would have been stronger without the Chorale. I think Richard heard the fans request when it came to arranging Trying To Get Thst Feeling again and maybe through software found a way to edit the songs voicing with just the two of them. It is an impeccable arrangement and makes me wonder what he would do with the rest of Horizon today. Would he give those songs a similar treatment with the use of an alternative rock use of the strings, etc.I was a DJ back in 1983 when 'Voice Of The Heart' was released. Whenever I played 'Your Baby Doesn't Love You Anymore', somebody would always come up and ask if it was Carpenters. It went over very well. 'Two Lives' was truly on 'heavy rotation' in our corner of the fraternity. My friends became hooked on that song and 'Your Baby', and 'Make Believe It's Your First Time' were also played a lot. I'd come home and my LP would be in somebody else's room.... those 3 songs especially. 'Two Lives' and 'Your Baby' are two of my all-time favorites. Everything about those two recordings is perfect to my ears. Even The Chorale is mixed pretty quietly on 'Two Lives', so it doesn't really distract.
I think Richard heard the fans request when it came to arranging Trying To Get Thst Feeling again and maybe through software found a way to edit the songs voicing with just the two of them.
^^I feel Two Lives is another under-represented Carpenters' gem.
Now, it would be interesting to make a list of the "choir" songs--
if only to see how many of those songs are enhanced--or not--through
utilization of the "choir"....
I always felt that "Silent Night" made excellent use of choir,
not so for the later-added choir on Ave Maria.
I first heard that same song on An Exactly The Same Kind of Radio station in the city where I lived at the time and It was a station I always listened to (Until they changed to a 50s 60s and 70s oldies format) and hearing that song reminded me of where I was originally raised and not Hawaii or even where I live now but the feeling of the lyrics made me Homesick for my childhood area. And as the lyric puts it "It's not easy to leave again" And that's how I felt on my last visit down there back in December last year. YES MUSIC HAS THAT KIND OF POWER.I DID hear "Honolulu City Lights" on a very soft elevator music station. It was only that one time - I didn't normally listen to that station - but it was on in a car dealer's showroom on one of their demo radio displays.
Lol. I figured that one..but not all words are clear and sometimes I have to credit compression for we don’t hear all formations clear and then there is dialect. It’s sometimes hard to hear that H consonant for sure. In Italian opera and singing it’s more important for the vowel to be on the beat. Listen to Joan Sutherland... she had spotless technique but diction is sometimes unclear.I remember trying to figure out the lyrics or title, but all I was getting was, "Each time on a lu-lu city night...". I couldn't figure out what a "lu-lu city night" was or why Karen was singing about it...
I agree that the choir that was added to the mix of 'Ave Maria' on later CD releases spoils the song a bit. This choir covers up Karen's beautiful high notes towards the end of the piece. I think that Karen's reading of 'Ave Maria' is brilliant.^^
I always felt that "Silent Night" made excellent use of choir,
not so for the later-added choir on Ave Maria.
Joan Sutherland's voice was amazing! What power! I think I've got about twenty of her CDs. My other favourite amongst classical singers is Kiri Te Kanawa. (My musical tastes swing from pop to rock, soul, blues, folk, traditional, world, classical, country, jazz, trance, alternate and reggae - but they don't stretch as far as heavy metal or hip-hop!)Listen to Joan Sutherland... she had spotless technique but diction is sometimes unclear.
She gets a bit much in the later choruses - sort of a bit harsh and whiney. She sounds good in the first chorus. I think, had she lived, those choruses would definitely have had to be re-recorded before release, but they could have kept that first take of the 'work lead' for the verses and bridge.
Joan Sutherland's voice was amazing! What power! I think I've got about twenty of her CDs. My other favourite amongst classical singers is Kiri Te Kanawa. (My musical tastes swing from pop to rock, soul, blues, folk, traditional, world, classical, country, jazz, trance, alternate and reggae - but they don't stretch as far as heavy metal or hip-hop!)
No, I haven't. I'll watch part of it soon. Thanks, Chris.