Swing Street Barry Manilow

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CD

  • Release Date: 06/04/2002
  • Original Release: 1987
  • Sales Rank: 31,546
  • Label: BMG SPECIAL PRODUCT
  • UPC: 755174692222
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Swing Street

1LISTENSwing Street 3:33
2LISTENBig Fun / Full Swing 3:55
3LISTENStompin' at the Savoy 2:42
4LISTENBlack and Blue / Tom Scott 4:02
5LISTENHey Mambo / Kid Creole & the Coconuts 2:55
6LISTENSummertime / Stan Getz 4:15
7LISTENBrooklyn Blues / Tom Scott 5:09
8LISTENStardust / Uncle Festive 5:20
9LISTENOnce When You Were Mine 2:51
10LISTENOne More Time / Gerry Mulligan 4:09

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

In the liner notes for Swing Street, Barry Manilow refers to his wish to record a "techno-swing album." While that term conjures images of mechanistic swing sets, it must actually refer to Swing Street's largely synthesized instrumentation. From the first few notes of its title track, the album seems like music made for an audience of mannequins. It certainly swings, especially on tracks like "Big Fun." But it does so in a cold, canned sort of way, suggesting jazz-pop if it was painstakingly recreated by futuristic robot musicologists. Manilow himself fully indulges in the vocal style of the genre, emoting up a storm on "Stardust" and "Summertime," a duet with Diane Schurr that also features the sax of Stan Getz. The latter track is a standout; together with the wistful, piano-driven "Once You Were Mine," it's the most real thing on the album. The rest of Swing Street can't outrun its digital composition, as illustrated by an unfortunate version of "Stompin' at the Savoy," which adds lyrics and sounds like Muzak on Mars. Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

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