|
Excellent Dance Music and
the related CD's :
WRD ULTIMATE BALLROOM ALBUM 2
written by D. H. LEE / DanceUniverse
Excellent Dance Music & CD | More about Music Artists | Dance
CD Shop | Dance Music Listening
|

|
THE
ULTIMATE BALLROOM ALBUM 2 |
R5 |
|
item#
M0831-318-5021 |
Vocal(V)/Instrumental(I):
|
WRD |
|
Rhythm/Dance:
Standard(std) |
Track:
39 |

|
This album contains so many beautiful and great songs in each of dance
rhythms of Slow Waltz, Slowfox, Quickstep, and Tango. Almost every one is so
great that it is not really possible to list some selected songs representing
this album. But, in order to give a good guide for you who loves dance music, we
would like to list followings of your special interests.
"Manuel & the Music of The Mountain" Orchestra
presents:
Love Theme from Romeo & Juliet : waltz 28 bpm
Recuerdos De Alhambra : waltz 29 bpm
The Singer Not the Song : waltz 29 bpm

Bobby Darin sings slowfox and quickstep, in his unique
great style:
A Nightingale Sang In Berkley Square : slowfox 29 bpm
Just In Time : slowfox 29 bpm
I'm Sitting on Top of the World : quickstep 48 bpm
more
about Bobby Darin .....
Alma Cogan sings slowfox. Her voice and style of music is
never imitable and one of the most beautiful in the world.
The Lady's In Love With You : slowfox 29 bpm
Somebody Loves Me : 29 bpm
Our Love Affair : 29 bpm
more
about Alma Cogan .....
Des O'Connor sings :
Dream A Little Dream of Me : slowfox 29 bpm
Heartaches : slowfox 29 bpm
You, No One But You : slowfox 29 bpm
Happiness & Heartaches : waltz 29 bpm
Try To Remember : waltz 29 bpm
"Geoff Love Orchestra" presents:
42nd Street : quickstep 49 bpm
It Don't Mean A Thing (if It Ain't got That Swing)
: 50 bpm
and others.
"Billy May Orchestra" presents slowfox in an explosively
rhythmical way:
Let's Put Out The Lights : slowfox 29 bpm

more
about Billy May .....
Yet, there are so many other great songs in this album.
Remark: In the WRD
2-CD ULTIMATE series, there are 4 different albums in the ULTIMATE BALLROOM
(Modern Standard Dance Music collection), and 3 albums in the ULTIMATE LATIN
(Latin Dance Music collection). All these 7 different CD's are really
recommended as "EXCELLENT" CD's.
BALLROOM
ALBUM
LATIN
ALBUM
Back
to the Top
More about the Singers
.....
Vikki Carr (Born: July 19 1941 in El Paso, Texas, U.S.A.)
source: All Music
Guide, www.allmusic.com
|
|
|
After singing in various school functions, local groups, and Pepe
Callahan's Mexican-Irish band, Carr began her
professional musical career in earnest in the early '60s. Her solo debut was in
Reno, supported by the Chuck
Leonard Quartet, which led to a record contract with Liberty. While not
gathering much attention in the U.S., her first single ("He's a Rebel") was a
hit in Australia and led to numerous television appearances, and a spell as a
regular on The Ray Anthony Show. In the late '60s, Carr scored
three Top 40 hits, including the number three "It Must Be Him." Her American
sales dwindled in the beginning of the '70s. With the release of her 1980 album,
Vikki Carr y el Amor, Carr gained
enormous success in the Latin music world.
|
In 1991, Carr won a
Best Latin Pop Album Grammy for her Cosas del Amor. Reta Manda y Provoca followed in 1998, and the
next year saw the release of Memories Memorias. Stephen Thomas
Erlewine
Back
to the Top
|
Alma Cogan (May 19 1932 - Oct. 26 1966)
source: All Music
Guide, www.allmusic.com
|
|
|
Alma Cogan was one of the most successful and tragic figures in English pop
music of the 1950's and early 1960's. Her 18 chart hits were a record for a
female singer at the end of the 1950's in England, and despite being of the
pre-rock 'n roll era, Cogan seemed capable of working with the new music when
her life was cut short.
The daughter of a haberdasher, Alma Cogan was born in St. John's Wood and
educated at St. Joseph' Convent School. It was Cogan's mother who pushed her
toward a career as a singer and onto the stage. In 1948, at age 16, she was
spotted in the chorus of High Button Shoes by EMI staff producer Walter J.
Ridley (also responsible, a decade later, for signing Johnny Kidd & The
Pirates), who subsequently signed her to the HMV label.
|
Around this same time,
she began appearing with cabaret at the Cumberland Hotel. Cogan began her career
doing ballads, but her first hit was a novelty tune called "Bell Bottom Blues"
(not the Derek & The Dominoes song), which got to No. 5 on the British
charts in 1954. A year later, she topped the charts for the first and only time
with "Dreamboat." She also covered several American hits, including "The Birds
and the Bees" and "Why Do Fools Fall In Love, " which was a hint of the range
she would show in her later career. By the turn of the 50's into the 1960's, she
was also the star of her own television program, and she reached the apex of her
success when Lionel Bart-whom, at one point, she apparently intended to
marry-cast her as Nancy in Oliver! Her name receded from the pop charts somewhat
in the early 1960's, as younger performers such as Helen Shapiro joined the EMI
roster, but Cogan was a fixture as a concert attraction during the first half of
the decade.
During the 1950's, Cogan attracted press attention as a personality, beyond
her singing, for her sense of humor, and for her collection of luxurious
clothes-it was said that she never wore the same dress twice, and her home was
filled with an extraordinary array of fashions. By the mid-1960's, Cogan was
much more celebrated in the gossip columns for the all-night parties she threw
at her Kensington High Street home, where guests included such diverse figures
as Stanley Baker, Paul McCartney, Roger Moore, Noel Coward, Ethel Merman, and
Lionel Bart, among many others. If she was no longer a chart-topping star, Cogan
was still a much-loved figure to her peers, and remained in touch with the
cutting edge of the popular music business, recording the music of Burt
Bacharach when he was still getting established, and befriending McCartney, who
must've loved making the acquaintance of EMI's biggest female pop star from the
period in which he was growing up. McCartney contributed percussion to the
B-side of one of her mid-1960's singles, which resulted in her covering "Eight
Days A Week, " as well as "Yesterday, " "I Feel Fine, " and "Ticket To Ride."
There's no telling where that friendship might've led-Cogan could easily have
been another, more mature Cilla Black, her voice serving as an outlet for
McCartney songs that weren't suited to the Beatles. If her version of "Eight
Days A Week"-a most startling re-thinking of the song, transforming it into a
gloriously lyrical torch-number, is any indication, she might've gone wonderful,
glorious things with "For No One, " "Your Mother Should Know, " and "When I'm
Sixty-Four." Alas, it was not to be-Cogan had just proved capable of making the
transition to a more rocking sound, or at least of embracing some components of
the last few years of changes in music, when tragedy struck. In 1966, Cogan was
diagnosed with cancer. She received treatments and planned to continue her
career, even writing several songs (under the name "Al Western") that were
recorded by other singers. She kept working during the year, and an album was
intended. Cogan continued concertizing, and while touring Sweden, she fainted.
She was diagnosed as terminally ill, and died on October 26 of that year in a
London hospital.
Her final album, Alma, was released early the following year, but Cogan was
never entirely forgotten. Collections of her music have shown up throughout the
CD era, including a complete triple-CD anthology (A to Z). In 1992, the BBC
presented a television documentary about her life and career. Bruce
Eder
Back
to the Top
|
Bobby Darin (May 14 1936 - Dec. 20 1973)
source: All Music
Guide, www.allmusic.com
|
|
|
There's been considerable discussion about
whether Darin should
be classified as a rock'n'roll singer, a Vegas hipster cat, an interpreter of
popular standards, or even a folk-rocker. He was all of these and none of these.
Throughout his career he made a point out of not becoming committed to any one
style at the exclusion of others; at the height of his nightclub fame he
incorporated a folk set into his act. When it appeared he could have gone on
indefinitely as a sort of junior version of Frank
Sinatra, he would periodically record pop-rock and folk-rock singles whose
principal appeal lay outside of the adult pop market. |
| At one point he started
calling himself Bob Darin
and recorded songs with vague anti-establishment overtones that could be said to
be biting the largely bourgeois hands that fed his highest-paying gigs. It may
be most accurate to say that Darin was,
above all, a singer who wanted to do a lot of things, rather
than make his mark as a particular stylist. That may have cost him some points
as far as making it to the very top of certain genres, but also makes his work
more versatile than almost any other vocalist of his era.
When Darin had his
first hits in the late '50s, he was a teen idol of sorts, albeit a teen idol
with much more talent and mature command than the typical singer in that style.
The novelty-tinged "Splish Splash" was his breakthrough smash, followed by
"Queen of the Hop" and the ballad "Dream Lover." There was a slight R&B feel
to Bobby's
delivery that may well have influenced R&B-pop-rock singers such as Dion,
though it would be an exaggeration to call Darin a
blue-eyed soul man. In late 1959, he found a new direction when the swinging
"Mack the Knife," a tune from Brecht-Weill's
Threepenny Opera musical, made #1. The song came
from an album of pop standards, heralding his move toward light big band jazz,
which was consolidated by the Top Ten success of "Beyond the Sea" in 1960.
In the early '60s, Darin had
mostly abandoned rock for the adult pop market, becoming a huge success on the
Vegas-nightclub circuit, and moving into the all-around entertainer mode with
starring roles in movies (including one as a non-singing jazz musician in John
Cassavetes' Too Young Blues). He also continued to score
regular hits with the likes of "You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby," "Things,"
and "Lazy River." To keep people guessing, there was also a hit cover of "What'd
I Say" and some country tunes (one of which, "You're the Reason I'm Living,"
made #3 on the pop charts). Around 1963, he put a folk section into his
nightclub act that employed guitarist Roger
McGuinn, then a couple of years away from fame as the leader of the
Byrds.
Darin
didn't make the expected retreat into Rat Pack land when his records stopped
making the upper reaches of the charts in the mid-'60s. In 1965, there was a
rather nice self-penned jangly folk-rocker, "When I Get Home," that become a
British hit for the
Searchers. Another 1965 flop, "We Didn't Ask to Be Brought Here," was an
unexpected anti-war tune. When he made his return to the Top Ten in late 1966,
it was with a cover of a gentle Tim
Hardin folk-rock song, "If I Were a Carpenter." His final Top Forty hit the
following year, "Lovin' You," opted for material by another major folk-rock
composer, John
Sebastian.
Darin
may indeed have been far more hipper and politically aware than the average
nightclub act, covering tunes by Dylan
and the
Rolling Stones, participating in a 1965 civil rights march to Alabama, and
penning some Dylan-influenced
songs of his own in the late '60s It doesn't seem accurate to say that this was
the true Bobby
Darin, shedding his show-biz skin for something that came to him more
naturally; in 1967, the same year he covered Jagger-Richards'
"Back Street Girl," he also recorded material for an album entitled Bobby Darin Sings Doctor Dolittle. By the early
'70s he working Vegas and similar joints again, exchanging his blue jeans for a
tuxedo, and hosting a TV variety series. In a much odder turn of events, he was
now recording for Motown, though these efforts met little success.
Born with a rheumatic heart, Darin was
always aware that his time might be limited, and died near the end of 1973
during open-heart surgery. He left behind a considerable quantity (and
diversity) of recorded work, and underwent a critical reevaluation of sorts,
especially among rock critics, which might have aided his election to the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990. A 1996 four-CD box set, divided into thematic
discs, attempted to put his wide-ranging efforts into perspective.
Richie Unterberger
|
Back
to the Top
|