Showing posts with label Platters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Platters. Show all posts

Thursday, December 1, 2016

The Platters - The Best Of The Platters

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 29:49
Size: 68.3 MB
Styles: R&B
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. The Great Pretender
[2:44] 2. Twilight Time
[2:37] 3. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[2:40] 4. Only You (And You Alone)
[2:44] 5. My Prayer
[2:28] 6. (You've Got) The Magic Touch
[2:38] 7. You'll Never Never Know
[2:52] 8. I'll Never Smile Again
[3:11] 9. Harbor Lights
[2:20] 10. Red Sails In The Sunset
[2:51] 11. Enchanted

A vocal talent of astonishing range and emotion, Tony Williams led the Platters through nearly two dozen Top 40 pop hits, starting in 1955. The Platters drew inspiration from predecessors such as the Mills Brothers, yet had a style all their own that came to be treasured by the first generation of rock & roll and doo-wop fans. This set features the group's Top 10 smashes "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes," "The Great Pretender," "Only You," "(You've Got) The Magic Touch," and several others. Shy of the two-disc Magic Touch: An Anthology, this is about as good a Platters best-of as you can find right now--and at a budget price, no less. ~Daniel Durchholz

The Best Of The Platters

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Various - American Graffiti (Highlights)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:43
Size: 109.3 MB
Styles: Oldies
Year: 1973/1998
Art: Front

[2:09] 1. Bill Haley & His Comets - Rock Around The Clock
[2:16] 2. Del Shannon - Runaway
[2:17] 3. Frankie Lymon & The Teenagers - Why Do Fools Fall In Love
[2:14] 4. Buddy Holly - That'll Be The Day
[2:18] 5. Chuck Berry - Almost Grown
[2:37] 6. The Platters - Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[2:06] 7. The Diamonds - Little Darlin'
[2:07] 8. The Regents - Barbara Ann
[2:00] 9. The Crickets - Maybe Baby
[2:24] 10. Fats Domino - Ain't That A Shame
[2:38] 11. Chuck Berry - Johnny B. Goode
[3:20] 12. The Flamingos - I Only Have Eyes For You
[2:42] 13. The Five Satins - To The Aisle
[2:39] 14. The Del Vikings - Come Go With Me
[1:55] 15. Johnny Burnette - You're Sixteen
[1:50] 16. The Clovers - Love Potion No. 9
[2:35] 17. The Skyliners - Since I Don't Have You
[2:39] 18. The Platters - Only You (And You Alone)
[2:42] 19. The Spaniels - Goodnight, Sweetheart, Goodnight
[2:05] 20. The Beach Boys - All Summer Long

In 1998, the original two-album set gets reduced to a single compact-disc selection to coincide with the 25th anniversary re-release of the original motion picture American Graffiti -- hence this best-of compilation, a curious release in and of itself. Still utilizing voice-overs from the late disc jockey Wolfman Jack, who had a memorable cameo in the movie, American Graffiti Highlights: 25th Anniversary Edition pares the original two-disc set down to highlights from Chuck Berry ("Johnny B. Goode," "Almost Grown"), Buddy Holly ("That'll Be the Day," "Maybe Baby"), the Platters ("Only You," "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes"), great rocking one-shots from Fats Domino, Del Shannon, Johnny Burnette, Bill Haley, and the Beach Boys, and plenty of great doo wop from the Spaniels, the Skyliners, the Clovers, Dell Vikings, the Five Satins, the Flamingos, the Regents, and the Diamonds. Even in this truncated 20-track form, this is still one great little oldies compilation to add to the collection. ~Cub Koda

American Graffiti (Highlights)

Monday, April 27, 2015

The Platters - Keep Me In Love

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:31
Size: 175.2 MB
Styles: R&B, Pop vocals
Year: 2013
Art: Front

[2:37] 1. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
[2:44] 2. The Glory Of Love
[2:55] 3. Until The Real Thing Comes Along
[2:50] 4. Bewitched, Bothered And Bewildered
[2:44] 5. Twilight Time
[2:40] 6. Someone To Watch Over Me
[2:36] 7. Only You
[2:44] 8. My Prayer
[2:37] 9. The Great Pretender
[2:27] 10. (You've Got) The Magic Touch
[2:38] 11. My Old Flame
[2:37] 12. You'll Never, Never Know
[2:44] 13. I Can't Get Started
[2:52] 14. I'll Never Smile Again
[2:25] 15. Somebody Loves Me
[3:08] 16. Harbor Lights
[2:23] 17. You Are Too Beautiful
[2:24] 18. You've Changed
[2:09] 19. Honeysuckle Rose
[2:51] 20. Enchanted
[2:20] 21. Red Sails In The Sunset
[2:12] 22. Life Is Just A Bowl Of Cherries
[3:07] 23. Thanks For The Memory
[2:19] 24. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write Myself A Letter
[2:52] 25. How Will I Know
[2:18] 26. You Can Depend On Me
[2:16] 27. That Old Feeling
[2:41] 28. Try A Little Tenderness
[3:07] 29. If I Didn't Care

The Platters were a successful black vocal group of the early rock n roll era. Their distinctive sound was a bridge between the pre-rock n roll Tin Pan Alley tradition of the Ink Spots and the Mills Brothers and the explosion of teenage music in the mid 1950s. The most successful incarnation of the group comprised lead tenor Tony Williams, David Lynch, Paul Robi, Herb Reed, and Zola Taylor.

The Platters formed in Los Angeles, CA, USA in 1953 and were initially managed by Ralph Bass. They had a contract with Federal Records but experienced little record success until they met music entrepreneur and songwriter Buck Ram. He added lead vocalist Tony Williams (who gave the Platters their distinctive sound) and female vocalist Zola Taylor. Under Ram’s guidance, the Platters recorded seven singles for Federal in an R&B/gospel style, scoring minor regional hits on the West Coast. One song recorded at Federal, “Only You (And You Alone)”, originally written by Ram for the Ink Spots was deemed unreleasable by the label. Despite lack of chart success, the Platters were a profitable touring group—so successful that The Penguins, fresh from their No. 2 single Earth Angel, asked Ram to manage them too. With the Penguins as a bargaining chip, Ram persuaded Mercury Records into a 2-for-1 deal. In order to sign the Penguins, he insisted, the label also take the Platters. Ironically, the Penguins never had a hit for the label.

Convinced by Tony Williams that “Only You” had potential, Ram had the group re-record it during their first Mercury session. Released in the summer of 1955, it became the group’s first Top Ten hit on the pop charts, and topped the R&B charts for seven weeks. It has since become one of the most played records in any genre and the song has been covered by innumerable artists. Ironically, the follow-up, The Great Pretender, with lyrics written by Ram in the washroom of the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas, exceeded the chart success of their début and became the Platters’ first national No.1 hit. The Great Pretender was also the act’s biggest R&B hit, with an 11-week run at the top of that chart. In 1956. The Platters appeared in the first major rock n roll movie, Rock Around the Clock, and performed both “Only You” and “The Great Pretender”[2] and they sang “You’ll Never Never Know” in The Girl Can’t Help It, produced the same year.

The Platters’ unique vocal style touched a nerve in the music-buying public, and a string of hit singles followed, including two more Top 100 No. 1 hits, one Hot 100 No. 1 hit, and more modest hits such as “I’m Sorry” (No. 11) and “He’s Mine” (No. 23) in 1957, “Enchanted” (No.12) in 1959, and “The Magic Touch” (No.4) in 1956. The Platters hit on a successful formula of updating older standards, such as “My Prayer”, “Twilight Time”, “Harbor Lights”, “To Each His Own”, “If I Didn’t Care” and Jerome Kern’s “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes”. This latter release caused a small controversy after Kern’s widow expressed concern that her late husband’s composition would be turned into a “rock n roll record”. It topped both American and British charts in a tasteful Platters-style arrangement.

The group was inducted into the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame in 1990 and into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in its inaugural year of 1998. The Platters were the first rock n roll group to have a Top Ten album in America. They were also the only act to have three songs included on the American Graffiti soundtrack that sparked an oldies revival in the early to mid-1970s: “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes”, “The Great Pretender” and “Only You (and You Alone)”.

Keep Me In Love