"This Guy's in Love"
by Steve Tyrell
review by Ed Vincent
Steve Tyrell sings; “This Guy’s In Love”
A wonderful soulful voice bringing many well known and
well
loved songs to the ears and hearts of a world that could
use a little love now more than ever. The sound is classy and warm,
like a sweater hugging you softly with the smell of an Autumn afternoon.
This looks like a nice gift for the holiday season.
We wish to make note that Steve Tyrell’s wife, Stephanie
Tyrell
has recently died and we wish the best for the Tyrell
family and those that loved her. She helped produce a great album and I
am sure that she will be missed by many.
(Mrs. Tyrell’s obituary is below)

Steve Tyrell
Steve Tyrell's new album "This Guy's in Love"
continues the traditional jazz standard bearer's remarkable return to the
artistic side of a career in music that goes back to the 1960s.
Indeed, the title track cover of the Herb Alpert
pop classic, which was penned by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, revitalizes
Tyrell's close relationship with Bacharach, with whom Tyrell was partnered
at the beginning of both their illustrious careersand whom Tyrell now
specially credits for his enduring friendship and inspiration. But the
entire disc, which also includes the Bacharach-David gem "I Just Don't
Know What to Do with Myself" and such stellar standards as "I've Got A
Crush
On You" "Georgia On My Mind," and "You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To," further
solidifies Tyrell's quiet but steady rise to the top of contemporary pop,
as well as his acknowledged influence on those stylists who have since
followed his shining example.
Many music fans, of course, were introduced
to Steve Tyrell via the movies, specifically, the 1991 Steve Martin hit
"Father of the Bride," in which he appeared and performed "The Way You
Look Tonight" on the soundtrack, and its 1995 sequel "Father of the Bride
Part II," which contained his soundtrack recordings of "Give Me the Simple
Life" and "On the Sunny Side of the Street." This led to "A New Standard,"
Tyrell's aptly titled first album of standards, which was released on Atlantic
in 1999. Peaking at No. 3 on the Billboard jazz chart, the album stayed
there an incredible 84-week span and has since topped the Billboard Jazz
catalog chart for another 100-plus weeks - almost entirely due to word-of-mouth
promotion by those lucky enough to discover it and then pass it on to friends.
"A New Standard"'s surprisesuccess paved the
way for a follow-up set, "Standard Time," which was Tyrell's 2001 Columbia
label debut album. Reaching No. 2 in it's second week of release, the album
remained highly ensconced on the jazz charts now two full years later.
He suitably followed it last fall with the release of "This Time of the
Year," an album of Christmas and holiday classics that stayed in the Top
5 even against regular non-holiday jazz fare by the likes Tony Bennett
and Diana Kral. Its single, "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town," was featured
in the Disney hit "Santa Claus 2," and attained top 10 status on Billboard's
A/C singles chart as well.
Yet even with three major album releases in
the last four years, extensive touring, and a number of high-profile television
appearances including last year's July 4th NBC special and the prestigious
"Christmas In Washington" holiday performance for President and Mrs. Bush,
Steve Tyrell has yet to enjoy the household name status of some of the
newcomers to a genre in which he has so excelled.
"Everything I've accomplished over the last
few years has really been a grassroots, underground sort of thing," concedes
Tyrell. "I probably wouldn't even have made the first standards album if
people hadn't discovered me in 'Father of the Bride' and started asking
about me. In fact, my nickname should be, 'Who was that guy that was singing?'
But luckily people asked and then found out and spread the word, and that's
the way it's been on all my albums."
With so many people out there passionately
promoting him, it would seem only a matter of time before Tyrell breaks
beyond the jazz charts and into the mainstream. Based on the merits of
his self-produced "This Guy's in Love," this time is now. Never has a singer
sounded more comfortable with songs that, to use Tyrell's own words, are
surely "the greatest songs ever written."
"People have told me over and over that they
can put my albums on and just play the whole thing from start to finish,
but of course, I'm singing the greatest songs ever written!" he enthuses.
"I'm very cautious that each album flows from beginning to end, but what
I'm most proud of is that I do something that stays true to these great
songs, while at the same time goes somewhere else: Did you ever hear a
Rogers & Hart song [lead track "Isn't It Romantic"] start off with
electric guitar? It sounds like it could be the Doobie Brothers! Yet it's
totally naturaland then Clark Terry, who was around with Rodgers &
Hart, takes a trumpet solo in the middle. And I put a violin solo in 'Georgia
On My Mind,' when there are very few violin solos."
Tyrell cites other album highlights in Bacharach's
arrangements of the two Bacharach-David offerings, and Dave Grusin's arrangement
of "Love Like Ours," which Grusin co-wrote with Alan and Marilyn Bergman.
The Jule Styne-Betty Comden-Adolph Green classic "Just In Time" stands
out for its novel bossa nova approach, not to mention old friend Michael
Brecker's breathtaking saxophone solo.
"It's really a continuation of what I've been
doing and moving on to another level," notes Tyrell. "There's a little
more edge to it but at the same time there's also more orchestra. My production
partners Bob Mann and Stephanie Tyrell and I always say that if we hear
a song we want to do and can't think of a way to do it differently because
they've all been done a thousand times then we don't do it: We don't think
it's right if we can't bring something fresh to these wonderful songs that
some of the greatest artists of all time have already done definitive versions
of."
The definitive version of Hoagy Carmichael's
"Georgia On My Mind," certainly, is Ray Charles, and Ray Charles is especially
noteworthy when discussing Steve Tyrell's atypical approach to pop standards.
"I knew my versions had to be different because
I was never really musically influenced originally by Frank or Nat but
by artists like Ray Charles and Jimmy Reed and Bobby Blue Bland." In fact,
his performing roots were in Houston in the early '60s, where at the age
of 16, he plied the same club circuit as B.J. Thomas, Kenny Rogers and
The Jazz Crusaders, singing with both a pop band and an all black R&B
band.
"I started as a singer, and had some hits in
Texas," recounts Tyrell. "But even in my teens I was more interested in
production and writing songs."
To briefly digress, Tyrell songs have since
been recorded by the estimable likes of Ray Charles, Diana Ross, and Elvis
Presley. His song "How Do You Talk To An Angel," written and produced for
Aaron Spelling's Fox television series "The Heights," was a No. 1 pop hit
in 1992 and earned Tyrell one of his two Emmy nominations.
As for producing, Tyrell went on to work with
such diverse artists as Bonnie Raitt, Blood Sweat and Tears, Linda Ronstadt,
Woody Allen, Alice Cooper, and LL Cool J., and even produced a Grammy-winning
gospel album in 1998 for Andy Griffith.
Tyrell's first break as a producer came with
legendary Houston producer/impresario Huey Meaux. Meaux let Tyrell produce
such artists as Barbara Lynn and Sunny & the Sunglows, and hooked him
up in New Orleans, where he joined forces with legendary New Orleans engineer/impresario
Cosimo Matassa and worked on records by such Crescent City greats as Aaron
Neville, Allen Toussaint, and Dr. John. He then moved to New York when
he was 18, and got a job as staff producer with Scepter Records.
At Scepter, Tyrell worked with the Shirelles
and met a pair of budding young songwriters, Burt Bacharach and Hal David,
who were just in the process of hitting it big with Dionne Warwick.
"I was the kid," he recalls. "I did A&R
and promotion, so I'd go on the road and take Dionne's records and get
them played on the radio. So I quit being an artist - but I never saw myself
as a record company executive."
The Scepter job, it turned out, would be the
only real job Tyrell would ever have. "I left in 1970 and made a label
deal with Clive Davis at Columbia--New Design Records," he continues. "I
produced a couple Blood, Sweat & Tears albums, and then partnered with
Barry Mann--whom I'd signed to Scepter and to my labeland moved to California
and started a music supervision company,Tyrell-Mann, long before music
supervision for movie soundtracks became the big business that it is today."
As Tyrell notes, he already had "good credits" in movie soundtracks having
scored a hit with Warwick's version of Bacharach-David's movie titletrack
"Alfie," and her No. 1 hit "The Theme From Valley Of The Dolls." Tyrell
was also responsible for bringing his old Texas buddy B.J. Thomas to Scepter
and promoting his huge Bacharach-David Oscar-winning hit from "Butch Cassidy
and the Sundance Kid," "Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head."
He quickly found success with Mann, half of
the legendary Brill Building songwriting husband-and-wife team Barry Mann
and Cynthia Weill. After the couple wrote "Somewhere Out There" with James
Horner for Steven Spielberg's animated film "An American Tail," Tyrell
suggested the song be reprised for the end credits. Sure enough, his co-production
of the song, as performed by Linda Ronstadt and James Ingram, rocketed
to No. 1 and won Grammys for "Song Of The Year" and "Best Song From A Motion
Picture," and also earned an Academy Award nomination. End-credits in animated
features have showcased great pop tunes ever since.
But Tyrell-Mann not only returned Tyrell to
the film business. It brought his career around full circle to becoming
an artist in his own right.
"I started working on a lot of movies and made
a lot of demos of Barry's and my stuff--and people started to hear my voice
again" he explains. "A lot of times directors and studio executives would
just hire me as the singer, but I never sang a standard until I worked
on 'Father of the Bride.'"
Tyrell's performance of "The Way You Look Tonight"
in the movie bowled over its stars Steve Martin and Diane Keaton, its director,
and preview audiences such that it was replayed over the end credits. "It
became the ultimate wedding song, and will keep me up with a 20 year-old
audience forever because everybody who gets married rents the movie! But
what ended up happening was that the studio got tons of letters asking
where they could buy my recordings, and people started saying to me that
I should record a standards album."
So Tyrell began studying the standards - and
fell in love with them. "But I didn't want to just pay tribute to the Great
American Songbook. I also wanted to tip the hat to the wonderful musicians
who made this music in the first place."
"A New Standard," then, featured the late trumpet
master Harry "Sweets" Edison, who had played with Count Basie, Sinatra,
and Billie Holiday, as well as "my musical godfather" Clark Terry, who
had played for Basie and Duke Ellington and mentored Quincy Jones. "These
guys were in their eighties, and I got to know them and feature them as
soloists," says Tyrell. "They brought an elegance and dignity and authenticity
to this music that modern musicians don't have."
But Tyrell takes pride, too, that other artists
have shown a new respect for the music that Tyrell has done so much to
bring back to the foreground.
"There's a whole new wave of artists recording
this music again," he relates, citing Rod Stewart, who recorded most of
his best-selling standards album in Tyrell's studio and also his old friends
Linda Rondstadt and Aaron Neville, who are both recording standards albums.
"I also understand Bette Midler has recorded 'A Tribute To Rosemary Clooney.'
Rosemary heard me sing in 'Father Of The Bride' and was one of the first
people to encourage me to record my own standards albums! And of course,
let's not forget to mention the great Boz Scaggs, who has an album of standards
out now doing quite well, too."
But Tyrell also makes note of such well-received
newcomers as Michael Buble, who recorded "The Way You Look Tonight" on
his acclaimed debut album, he told Tyrell, because his mother is a huge
Tyrell fan and insisted that he record it.
Tyrell still works on select movie projects.
"I couldn't resist working with Jack Nicholson on his new Christmas release,
especially when I heard he wanted me to produce a track of him singing
a standard," he says, having also just completed producing the entire soundtrack
for a new John Grisham film entitled "Mickey," which stars Harry Connick,
Jr.
"Nothing makes me happier than to see this
music coming back," concludes Tyrell on the eve of "This Guy's In Love"'s
release. "It's the greatest contribution that America has made to the arts."
-Jim Bessman
STEPHANIE
TYRELL
Stephanie Georgia Manteris Tyrell,
beautiful and beloved wife and mother, passed away on Monday, October 27th
2003 at Cedar Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles at the age of 54. An accomplished
artist, songwriter, poet, and record producer, Stephanie was a Cable Ace
award winner, Emmy nominee, and lyricist of over 200 songs and poems. Her
song "How Do You Talk To An Angel" reached Number One in Billboards' Hot
100 in 1992 and at the time was the most successful song ever written for
a television series. Some notable artists who have recorded Stephanie Tyrell
lyrics include Ray Charles, Diana Ross and James Ingram. Her lyric of "Remember
The Dream", the theme of Black Entertainment Television, was chosen by
Coretta Scott King to be sung at the grave of Dr. Martin Luther King on
the 25th anniversary of his death in 1993. Her songs and productions have
been featured in such notable films as "Father of the Bride", "The Client,"
Santa Claus II", "Mystic Pizza", "The Brady Bunch" and the upcoming Jack
Nicholson film "Something's Gotta Give."
Her incredible beauty, talent
and grace were surpassed only by her remarkable courage and spirit. Stephanie
made an indelible impression and was beloved by everyone she met. During
her eighteen-month battle with cancer she never once lost her sense of
humor and continued to be the guiding force of the family, constantly contributing
to the well being of her children and producing two successful albums for
her husband Steve from her hospital bed. She fought a most gallant fight
against a terrible disease and kept her spirit, humor, grace and dignity
in tact until the very end. She will always be remembered for her overwhelming
beauty, as it emanated from every aspect of her being.
A Rosary was recited by Saint
Anne Parish on Thursday, October 30th, 2003 at 7pm in the Chapel of George
H. Lewis and Sons, 1010 Bering Dr. in Houston, Texas. The funeral service
will be held on Saturday, November 1st, 2003 at 11:30 in the morning at
Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church 3511 Yoakum Blvd. in Houston. Interment
will follow in Forest Park Lawndale Cemetery.
A Celebration of Stephanie's life
in music, poetry and art will be held in Los Angeles in November.
To
make a donation in memory of Stephanie, please send checks to The Childrens
Hospital Los Angeles Foundation, Childrens Center for Cancer and Blood
Diseases. Attention: Elizabeth LaBorde, 4650 Sunset Blvd. #29 Los Angeles,
CA 90027 |