Right Now! (Mel Tormé album)

Right Now! is a 1966 studio album by Mel Tormé.[2] Columbia followed up Tormé's 1965 album of standards with "an obvious bid to sell records by putting Tormé's voice on pre-sold hits of the mid-'60s."[3] "The Velvet Fog's" descent on contemporary middle-of-the-road top-40 melodies from Paul Simon and the Bacharach-David catalogue leads some to emphasize the commercialism of the project and file this period of Tormé's career in the lounge music section of records stores, as evidenced by his appearances on compilations like the Ultra Lounge series. However, music critic Will Friedwald makes a strong case that the work of Tormé and arranger Mort Garson elevated the project above "an album of straight "covers"."[4]

Right Now!
Studio album by
Released15 August 1966
Recorded18 April & 10-11 June 1966
GenreVocal jazz
Length68:24
LabelColumbia
Mel Tormé chronology
That's All
(1965)
Right Now!
(1966)
A Day in the Life of Bonnie and Clyde
(1968)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

In 1997, Right Now! was treated to a CD reissue, with previously unreleased bonus tracks and liners notes.

Track listing

  1. "Comin' Home Baby" (Bob Dorough, Ben Tucker) – 3:21
  2. "Homeward Bound" (Paul Simon) – 2:33
  3. "My Little Red Book" (Burt Bacharach, Hal David) – 2:40
  4. "Walk on By" (Bacharach, David) – 2:56
  5. "If I Had a Hammer" (Lee Hays, Pete Seeger) – 3:05
  6. "Strangers in the Night" (Bert Kaempfert, Charles Singleton, Eddie Snyder) – 2:41
  7. "Better Use Your Head" (Vargus Pike, Teddy Randazzo) – 2:52
  8. "Time" (Michael Merchant) – 3:40
  9. "Secret Agent Man" (Steve Barri, Sloan) – 2:35
  10. "Pretty Flamingo" (Mark Barkan) – 2:27
  11. "Red Rubber Ball" (Simon, Bruce Woodley) – 2:36

Bonus tracks 1997 Columbia records reissue

  1. "All That Jazz" (B. Carter, A. Stillman) – 2:10 - arranged & conducted by Mort Garson, rec. 18 Apr 1966, from the 1966 film A Man Called Adam, single #4-43677, rel. 6 Jun 1966
  2. "You Don't Have To Say You Love Me" (P. Donaggio, V. Pollavincini, V. Wickhams, S. Napier-Bell) – 2:32 - arranged & conducted by Mort Garson, rec. 10 Jun 1966, previously unreleased
  3. "Dominique's Discotheque" (R. Straigis, H. Linsley, B. Ross) - 2:56 - arranged & conducted by Shorty Rogers, rec. 28 Jan 1966, single #4-43550 rel. 14 Mar 1966
  4. "The Power of Love" (Delaney Bramlett, Joey Cooper) - 2:29 - arranged & conducted by Shorty Rogers, rec. 28 Jan 1966, single #4-43550 rel. 14 Mar 1966
  5. "Lover's Roulette" (P.R. Arenas, C. Edmonds, J. Thompson) - 2:34 - arranged & conducted by Ernie Freeman, rec 27 Apr 1967, single #4-44180, 7 Jun 1967
  6. "Ciao Baby" - 2:05 - arranged & conducted by Ernie Freeman, rec 27 Apr 1967, previously unreleased
  7. "Molly Marlene" (T. Thornton) - 2:14 - arranged & conducted by Ernie Freeman, rec 27 Apr 1967, previously unreleased
  8. "The King" - 1:58 - arranged & conducted by Ernie Freeman, rec 27 Apr 1967, previously unreleased
  9. "Lima Lady" (M. Curtis, J. Meyer) - 2:24 - arranged & conducted by Arnold Goland, rec 17 Nov 1967, single #4-44399, 5 Dec 1967
  10. "Wait Until Dark" (Henry Mancini, Jay Livingston, Ray Evans) - 2:40 - arranged & conducted by Arnold Goland, rec 17 Nov 1967, single #4-44399, 5 Dec 1967
  11. "Only When I'm Lonely" - 2:57 - arranged & conducted by Arnold Goland, rec 17 Nov 1967, previously unreleased

Personnel

  • Mel Tormé - vocal, drums
  • Howard Roberts - guitar
  • James Getzoff, Robert Barene, Henry Ross, Marshall Sosson, Sidney Sharp, Arnold Belnick, Nathan Ross, Harry Bluestone - violin
  • Myron Sadler, Joseph DiFiore - viola
  • Armand Karpoff, Frederick Seykora - cello
  • Michael Melovin - piano
  • Gary Coleman - vibraphone
  • Jim Gordon - drums
  • Al McKibbon - Bass
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gollark: <@221827050892296192> Those are just maths. There are no *actual* circles to infinite precision in the real world. We just know that the abstract idea of circles and whatnot follows those rules, and matches real-world ones fairly well in most situations.
gollark: Good short story about that: https://qntm.org/responsibility
gollark: I think it's not very productive to try and reason about the desires of the hypothetical simulation-running beings when they're not (necessarily) anything like humans and when the only information we have to work with is our universe.
gollark: <@498244879894315027> It's unfalsifiable. You can't prove we're *not* in a simulation.

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Right Now! at AllMusic
  3. Will Friedwald's liner notes from the 1997 CD reissue of Right Now!
  4. Will Friedwald's liner notes from the 1997 CD reissue of Right Now!
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