Nilsson Sings Newman album cover

Randy Newman writes the songs that Nilsson sings, songs of honey and special things.

Kronomyth 5.0: I'yard not in love with the idea, but it works.

Half of the cloth on Harry was covers, including a vocal by up-and-coming songwriter Randy Newman ("Simon Smith and the Astonishing Dancing Acquit"), but it nevertheless didn't set y'all for an entire album of covers by i artist. At first glance, Nilsson Sings Newman would seem to put too much focus on the songs of Newman, but here's the thing: the real cardinal to the album is Nilsson sings. By focusing—okay, more like hyperfocusing—on the vocals, Nilsson delivers a tour de strength of the human voice. Stereo Review named it their album of the year for 1970, and while they were known for picking underdogs (I mean, really, Muswell Hilbillies?), Nilsson conspicuously wasn't the only one who took the experiment seriously.

The album is unique for several reasons. Let'southward outset with the songs themselves: short vignettes of a bygone America that looks to recapture some of the innocence and authenticity of human relationships in an uncluttered time. Really curt vignettes, actually; the whole album runs under 30 minutes. The instrumentation is spare, featuring mostly Newman's piano and some additional touches from Nilsson. And that leaves more room for that vocalism, which is multitracked into a human chorus on many of these tracks. Nilsson and a team of overdub engineers purportedly did over 1 hundred vocal takes for a unmarried song. In that sense, Nilsson Sings Newman is a perfect album, or at least a perfect functioning of these songs.

Highlights include the opening Vine Street, which starts like an actual song before settling into vocalization and pianoforte arrangements for the rest of the album; the powerful Cowboy, in which Nilsson literally goes from a whisper to a scream; the gorgeous Caroline and Living Without Yous (the latter with a trace of Beach Boys in it); and And so Long Dad, a song that must have struck a deep chord with Nilsson. There are two instances where Nilsson's directions to the engineers have been preserved (Dayton, Ohio 1903 and "Then Long Dad"), which are quintessentially Nilssonian moments in their mischief and self-demolition. I suppose we're all our own worst enemy, but Nilsson seems to relish the role more most.

Nilsson Sings Newman is admirable for a number of reasons, from its painfully verbal engineering to its magnanimous conclusion to showcase the songwriting of Randy Newman. (Apparently, the number is 2.) It is not, however, one of my favorite Nilsson albums. Information technology's more than of a clever curio, timeless in one sense all the same hopelessly out of time at the same fourth dimension. (Sometimes I simply sow confusion.) It's an album that casual listeners and even Nilsson fans volition need to warm upwards to, which somewhen they will. I would hazard to approximate, for example, that the folks at Stereo Review listened to this album more than than one time before declaring it the best album of the year. Ultimately, the album stands on the strengths of its two pillars: the singing of Nilsson and the songs of Newman. That those pillars are all there is (excepting the pianoforte playing of Newman) is a surprise, but a sweet surprise.

Original elpee version

A1. Vine St. (two:50)
A2. Love Story (3:39)
A3. Xanthous Man (ii:16)
A4. Caroline (2:05)
A5. Cowboy (2:48)
B1. The Beehive State (two:04)
B2. I'll Be Domicile (2:35)
B3. Living Without You lot (two:35)
B4. Dayton, Ohio 1903 (1:50)
B5. So Long Dad (2:35)

All songs written by Randy Newman.

CD reissue bonus tracks
eleven. Snowfall
12. Love Story
13. Cowboy
xiv. I'll Be Dwelling house
15. Living Without You

Original 8-track version
A1. Love Story
A2. Cowboy
B1. Yellow Man
B2. Living Without You
B3. Dayton, Ohio 1903
C1. Caroline
C2. The Beehive State
C3. And so Long Dad
D1. Vine St.
D2. I'll Exist Domicile

The Pictures

Anthology designed by Dean O. Torrence/Kittyhawk Graphics. (The Dean of Jan & Dean).

The Players

Harry Nilsson (vocals, instruments), Randy Newman (pianoforte, keyboards) with special thanks to George Tipton and Lenny Waronker. Basic tracks engineered by Grover Helsley; technicians & engineers: Steve Barncard, Pat Ieraci, Michael Leary, Allen Zentz.

The Plastic

Released on elpee and viii-track in Feb 1970 in the US (RCA Victor, LSP-4289). 8-track features dissimilar track order.

  1. Re-issued on elpee in the US (RCA Victor, APL1-0203) with shut-up cover.
  2. Re-issued on elpee and 8-runway (Pickwick/Camden, ACL/C8S-7071).
  3. Re-issued on elpee in Taiwan (Giant, TD-1254) with close-up cover.
  4. Re-issued on elpee (Analog Spark, AS00054).
  5. Re-issued on cassette in 1989 in the US (RCA, 4289-4-R).
  6. Re-released on thirtyth anniversary edition expanded, remastered compact disc in 2000 in the US (Buddha/BMG, 7446599703 2) with 5 bonus tracks.
  7. Re-packaged with Harry on 2-for-1 expanded meaty disc on August 14, 2000 (BMG/RCA Camden) with two bonus tracks.