Showing posts with label Shirley Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shirley Jones. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Shirley Jones - My Time to Shine

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:21
Size: 174,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:58) 1. My Time to Shine
(4:55) 2. Ready to Go
(4:00) 3. Totally Confused
(4:25) 4. Merry Go Round
(4:52) 5. When a Womans' in Love
(4:20) 6. All I Want
(4:47) 7. Say
(5:13) 8. What About Me ?
(3:56) 9. I'm at Your Mercy
(3:56) 10. Because You Love Me
(4:56) 11. We Are All One
(4:59) 12. One More Time

As lead vocalist on Jones Girls hits that have etched a permanent place in the minds and hearts of soul fans, Shirley Jones has a straight-ahead, uncomplicated style which makes tunes such as “You Gonna Make Me Love Somebody Else” and “Nights over Egypt” sound just as fresh today as they did 30-some years ago. She proved her ability to go it alone in 1986 with the quiet-storm favorites “Do You Get Enough Love” and “Last Night I Needed Somebody”; but most listeners probably don’t realize that her new album, My Time to Shine, is actually her fourth solo collection. After reuniting briefly with her sisters in the early ‘90s for Coming Back (see our review of the CD reissue), she released the sophisticated With You in 1994 on London-based Diverse Recordings, and sixteen years later issued Feels Like Heaven independently.

My Time to Shine, however, might be Jones’s strongest album yet. Where many of today’s neo-soul and retro-styled R&B recordings often bow to commercial interests in one way or another, the singer and her producers steer clear of easy tricks and frilly enhancements. Whether the soundscape be the take-no-prisoners groove of “Ready to Go” or the bluesy sway of “One More Time,” Jones treats each melody with a delicate balance of grace and sass, fully evoking the pure and heartfelt lyrical canvases. Perfectly embodying her grasp of forthright phrasing while enhancing the instrumental components of a tune, the title track, indeed, shines with Stax-inspired horn stylings, an irresistible rhythm track, and sly guitar licks working in tandem with Jones’s assertive stance of self-assurance and keeping it real. Meanwhile, the soothing, slow-swingin’ “Say” (lifted from the aforementioned With You) is a glowing reminder of her innate talent as a balladeer.

Bringing home Jones’s continually positive stance of faith and patience, the introspective stepper “Because You Love Me” (released last year as a single) incorporates a classic Jones Girls vibe courtesy of songwriter/producer Errol Henry that is mellow in tone and celestial in melody. Gliding seamlessly from alto verses to soprano riffing after an appropriately spirit-lifting key change, Jones presents a convincing case for spirituality without any over-the-top semantics or preachy antics. Bearing a more contemporary rhythmic sensibility, the thought-provoking “We Are All One” shines the spotlight on excessive violence in society via simple yet affecting words: “Black lives matter/White lives matter/We’re in this together, we’re one.” Although the cameo male vocalist adds lyrically to the platform, his style is not quite in tandem with Jones and thus distracts the listener a bit from the overall atmosphere.

Consistently authentic in its material and Jones’s delivery, My Time to Shine notably borrows several tracks from the previously alluded to Coming Back. While it’s a bit questionable that these Jones Girls selections would be included on a Shirley Jones solo album (without mention of the original source), they are stylistically in sync enough with the new material to warrant an appearance here especially as many stateside listeners are likely unfamiliar with them. The sunny “Merry Go Round” and entrancing “All I Want” are rich uptempo selections that add a nice balance to the set and further demonstrate Jones’s and producer Errol Henry’s organic chemistry. Recommended. By Justin Kantor
https://www.soultracks.com/album-review-shirley-jones-my-time-to-shine

My Time to Shine

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Shirley Jones & Jack Cassidy - Speaking of Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2021
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:10
Size: 89,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:45) 1. Vienna, City of My Dreams
(2:22) 2. I'll Follow My Secret Heart
(3:03) 3. Try to Forget
(2:30) 4. Sympathy
(3:15) 5. The Song Is You
(3:31) 6. Will You Remember
(4:08) 7. If You Could Only Come with Me / I'll See You Again
(2:58) 8. Lover, Come Back to Me
(2:46) 9. Wanting You
(2:53) 10. A Kiss in the Dark
(3:27) 11. You Are Love
(3:25) 12. Kiss Me Again

Shirley Jones, the young star of the Rodgers & Hammerstein movie musicals Oklahoma! and Carousel, married Jack Cassidy, the Broadway stage musical performer whose featured appearances included Wish You Were Here and Shangri-La, on August 5, 1956, and the following year the couple released this LP of songs from musicals and operettas that had played in New York and London between 1905 ("Kiss Me Again" from Victor Herbert's Mlle. Modiste) and 1934 ("I'll Follow My Secret Heart" from Noel Coward's Conversation Piece).

By 1957, such material, the work of composers like Rudolf Friml, Jerome Kern, and Sigmund Romberg, was out of date on stage and film, but Jones and Cassidy applied their trained voices Jones' pure soprano, Cassidy's soaring tenor to it with sincerity and fervor, and Percy Faith gave them an accompaniment to support their best efforts. They didn't quite bring back the age of the operetta, but they showed that it could have a contemporary meaning, especially in its romantic sentiments.

Cassidy soloed brilliantly on Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II's "The Song Is You" from Music in the Air, taking the title back from such pop craftsmen as Frank Sinatra, and Jones had her way with Herbert and B.G. DeSylva's "A Kiss in the Dark" from Orange Blossoms. But the rest of the tracks were duets, and the couple's real-life romance turned Kern and Hammerstein's "You Are Love" from Show Boat and Romberg and Hammerstein's "Lover, Come Back to Me!" from New Moon into impassioned musical statements. The interpretations bordered on classical music rather than pop, but they also brought new life to a virtually moribund form.By William Ruhlmann
https://www.allmusic.com/album/speaking-of-love-mw0001286744

Speaking of Love

Thursday, March 9, 2023

Shirley Jones - Richard Rodgers Songbook With Love

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2023
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:01
Size: 76,2 MB
Art: Front

(2:08) 1. Wish I Were In Love Again
(3:18) 2. It Never Entered My Mind
(3:00) 3. Isnt It Romantic
(4:29) 4. Spring Is Here
(3:14) 5. Where Or When
(2:47) 6. I Have Dreamed
(3:28) 7. Blue Moon
(4:15) 8. It Might As Well Be Spring
(2:05) 9. Falling In Love With Love
(4:14) 10. Bewitched

Named after child star Shirley Temple, Shirley Jones started singing at the age of six. She started formal training at the age of 12 and would dream of singing with her idol, Gordon MacRae. Upon graduating from high school, Shirley went to New York to audition for the casting director of Rodgers & Hammerstein. Taken by Shirley's beautifully trained voice, Shirley was signed as a nurse in the Broadway production of "South Pacific". Within a year, she would be in Hollywood to appear in her first film Oklahoma! (1955) as Laurey, the farm girl in love with cowboy Gordon MacRae. Oklahoma! (1955) would be filmed in CinemaScope and Todd-AO wide-screen and would take a year to shoot.

After that, Shirley returned to Broadway for the stage production of "Oklahoma!" before returning to Hollywood for Carousel (1956). But by this time, musicals were a dying art and she would have a few lean years. She would work on television in programs like Playhouse 90 (1956). With a screen image comparable to peaches-n-cream, Shirley wanted a darker role to change her image. In 1960, she would be cast as the vengeful prostitute in the Richard Brooks dramatic film Elmer Gantry (1960). With a brilliant performance against an equally brilliant Burt Lancaster, Shirley would win the Oscar for Supporting Actress. But the public wanted the good Shirley so she was cast as "Marion", the librarian, in the successful musical The Music Man (1962). Robert Preston had played the role on Broadway and his performance along with Shirley was magic.

Shirley would again work with little Ron Howard in The Courtship of Eddie's Father (1963). But the movies changed in the 60's and Shirley's image did not fit so she would see her movie career stop in 1965. There were always nightclubs, but Shirley would be remembered by another generation as "Shirley Partridge" in the television series The Partridge Family (1970). While the success of the show would do more for her stepson, teen idol David Cassidy, it would keep her name and face in the public view for the four years that the series ran. The show still plays in reruns. After the show ended, Shirley would spend the rest of the 70's in the land of television movies.

The television movie The Lives of Jenny Dolan (1975) would be made as a pilot for a series that was not picked up. In 1979, Shirley appeared in a comedy show called Shirley (1979), but the show lasted only one season. Shirley would appear infrequently in the 80's and in video's extolling fitness and beauty at the end of the decade.
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0429250/bio?ref_=nm_ql_1#mini_bio

The Richard Rodgers Songbook With Love