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Paul Williams - Very Best of A&M Years on Hip-O Select

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Steve Sidoruk

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Paul Williams

Evergreens - The Very Best Of The A&M Years


Track Listing

1. We've Only Just Begun
2. Waking Up Alone
3. I Never Had It So Good
4. An Old-Fashioned Love Song
5. Let Me Be The One
6. Out In The Country
7. I Won't Last A Day Without You
8. Traveling Boy
9. You And Me Against The World
10. That's What Friends Are For
11. Rainy Days And Mondays
12. Rainy Days And Mondays
13. What Would They Say
14. Dream Away
15. A Little Bit Of Love
16. The Family Of Man
17. Nice To Be Around
18. Loneliness
19. Time And Tide
20. Ordinary Fool
21. Evergreen
22. The Hell Of It

Price: $19.98

RELEASE DATE: NOVEMBER 19TH
CD Edition limited to 5000 non-numbered limited edition copies.

Paul Williams came out to Hollywood in search of an acting career, and he’s done some interesting parts, including succeeding Michael Dunn as Dr Miguelito Loveless, Jr. in The Wild Wild West and the character Swan in Phantom Of The Paradise, one of the best rock movies ever. He also starred alongside Kermit and Miss Piggy in The Muppet Movie. But it was as a songwriter, and subsequently a performer, that he earned his greatest fame.

After he signed on with A&M as staff writer (and teamed up with Roger Nichols), several of the duo’s tunes were recorded as b-sides and album tracks by various A&M artists, but their first significant commercial breakthrough came when “Out In The Country” became a Top 20 hit for Three Dog Night. Not long thereafter, they wrote a jingle for Crocker Bank, “We’ve Only Just Begun,” that was warmly embraced by the public, including a young Richard Carpenter. He saw it as a potential hit track, if expanded past the sixty-second confines of a television spot. He was right. The Carpenters’ version of the tune went gold and hit #2 on the pop charts on its way to becoming perhaps the second-most played tune at weddings, following the ubiquitous Mendelssohn march. Welcome to the big time.

Williams signed to A&M as an artist, making his solo album debut with 1971's Just An Old Fashioned Love Song, and throughout the Seventies he recorded half a dozen discs for the label. While he is modest about his singing talent, there’s an intimacy to his versions of many of his hits that renders them immediately engaging. Like many artists, he went through a bad patch in his personal life in the Eighties, but he has emerged triumphant on the other side, and continues to write and perform.

Spanning the half-dozen years he was with the A&M label, Evergreens offers a unique insight into the first flowering of one of pop music’s great songwriters, both as writer and performer. And for people who don’t know Williams’ work as a singer, it places into a new context songs that have occupied considerable acreage on the charts and in our hearts.
 
Rainy Days and Mondays is listed twice. Is there another song that's supposed to appear in one of those slots, or do we just delete the extra?

I'm disappointed in the choices from LIFE GOES ON, his best A&M album. I would have included the title track, "Where Do I Go From Here," and "The Lady is Waiting" along with "Out in the Country." And, I was really hoping for "That's Enough for Me" from JUST AN OLD FASHIONED LOVE SONG. Oh well.
 
It was a copy & paste from Hip-O site, so don't know if it was an error or a different version. I didn't give all the clips a listen yet.

Steve
 
I am in exact agreement with Mike as for selection choices. I wonder if this collection does OK for Universal/Hip-O that Rhino Handmade might put the Reprise album out and possibly put the Holy Mackerel group album with it to make the twnty dollar price worth the customer's while. Mac
 
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