24 July 2020

'All the Way' with Sammy, Plus Bonus Singles

I haven't featured Sammy Davis, Jr. here much before, so I hope today's post makes amends. It includes his 1958 LP All the Way . . . and Then Some! with a substantial bonus of nine relatively rare single sides, also from Davis' time at Decca.

I transferred the LP for my friend John Morris, who is assembling all Sammy's recorded output. I then added the singles from lossless needle drops on Internet Archive that I remastered.

My previous Davis post involved his brief contribution to a PanAm promotional LP.

All the Way . . . and Then Some!

In the time-honored record company practice, the title of this LP is different from front cover to back cover to liner notes to label. (That's OK, I'm not entirely consistent myself.) I'm going with the front cover title, with standard capitalization.


The LP consists of the usual 12 tracks, assembled from six 1957-58 recording session with five different arrangers - Morty Stevens, Sonny Burke, Dick Stabile, Russ Garcia and Jack Pleis. In other words, it's not the sort of cohesive entity that Davis' great friend Frank Sinatra was putting out at the time. Usually when this is the case with an LP, the tracks are collated from previously released singles. But all of these songs were first issued on this LP and contemporary EPs.

I don't mean to signal that it's a bad record - far from it. Davis was almost as engaging on record as he was on stage - and he was famed as one of the world's greatest live entertainers. That said, it's hard to convey Sam's multiple talents on record - dancing, playing drums and trumpet, impressions and comedy along with the singing. But Davis did incorporate his gift for mimicry onto the occasional record, to the extent of producing an All Star Spectacular of impersonations for Reprise in 1961.

This particular LP starts off, in fact, with a credible impression of Frank Sinatra singing his then-current hit, "All the Way." After finishing the song, "Frank" dismisses conductor Nelson Riddle with the wish that he "sleep warm" (the title of a Sinatra-Riddle single and LP track). Davis then enters in his own voice and asks Frank to leave the band behind so he can do his own version of the song - which is more uptempo.

The LP follows "All the Way" with "Look to You Heart," a Sinatra song from several years earlier. Davis then leaves the Voice's repertoire behind in favor of an unlikely resurrection of Jane Powell's "Wonder Why" from the 1953 film Rich, Young and Pretty. It's good!

The balance of the songs are standards, with the possible exception of 1934's "Stay as Sweet as You Are," a Revel-Gordon tune from College Rhythm. As usual, Davis is effective whether in lyric or swinging mode.

Sammy Davis and Eartha Kitt in Anna Lucasta
The recording of the first track here ("They Can't Take That Away from Me") took place just as Mr. Wonderful, the Broadway show that had been written for Davis, was closing in February 1957. The last song recorded was "All the Way" in May 1958, after which Davis left for California and a starring role in the film Anna Lucasta, opposite Eartha Kitt. Later that year, he was Sportin' Life in the film version of Porgy and Bess.

Decca Singles

Unlike the LP's material, the songs from the singles are largely unfamiliar. I chose singles that the online Davis sessionography says haven't had an official re-release.

First up is "The Red Grapes," a Ross Bagdasarian tune. This recording, from a 1954 session, came after Bagdasarian's first big success as a songwriter, "Come on-a My House," but before his hits with "Witch Doctor" and the "The Chipmunk Song." Sy Oliver is the maestro for the Sammy single.

The four succeeding songs, all dating from 1955, are directed by Morty Stevens. "A Man with a Dream" comes from Victor Young's short-lived Broadway musical Seventh Heaven. Next are two duets with Gary Crosby - "Ac-cent-tchu-ate the Positive" and "Beat Me Daddy Eight to the Bar," the Ray McKinley specialty. Sam and Gary have no special chemistry, but the results are not unpleasant, and Sammy manages to work in an excellent Louis Armstrong impression. These are the only two records that Crosby and Davis made together.

Frank and Sam
The final song from 1955 is notable as a Jimmy Van Heusen-Sammy Cahn song written for Sinatra that Frank never released. It is "The Man with the Golden Arm," a title song manque for the film of the same name that starred Sinatra. The music for the film was by Elmer Bernstein and was superb. The Van Heusen-Cahn song was designed as a promotional song for the film. Frank recorded it, but it went unreleased until the 90s. Odd - it's a good song, and Davis does it beautifully, a few intonation problems aside.

Mr. Wonderful: Olga James, Sammy Davis, Chita Rivera
As 1956 began, Davis was preparing the Broadway show that was built around his talents, Mr. Wonderful, which opened in March and ran for nearly a year. In the run-up to the opening, Decca had him record the Jerry Bock-Lawrence Holofcener-George David Weiss songs from the score, including "Jacques d'Iraque." This take is different from the one that appeared on the cast album. Morty Stevens - who also did some of the arrangements and conducted the Broadway show - is again the leader of the band.

Peter Cadby's "'Specially for Little Girls" is a sensitive song done beautifully by Sammy with Sy Oliver conducting. At about this time, Cadby scored a children's film sponsored by the American Jewish Committee. This song may be from that film.

"Good Bye, So Long, I'm Gone" and "French Fried Potatoes and Ketchup" are the final two songs in this set, both from May 1956. They are essentially R&B numbers that David handles very nicely, particularly the latter item, which also was done by Amos Milburn for Aladdin. Sy Oliver is again in charge of the band.

The sound both on the LP and the singles is more than adequate.

29 comments:

  1. Link (Apple lossless):

    https://mega.nz/file/GV0xyCrL#QKTreSNgzRfiI24-lSpbHxEE7s1SX-Lo4FHtEFl9n1g

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  2. This looks awesome! Thanks for sharing! Did you see the Sammy singles on Capitol that he released under a pseudonym? Shorty Muggins and Charlie Green I think were the names. Not sure about their current availability, though, I seem to remember one or two of this showing up on his entry into the Capitol Collectors Series. Thanks again!

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  3. Shorty Muggins and Charlie Green?! I love it! I have to look into that.

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  4. I looked, and even though I have the CD, I had no recollection of Shorty Muggins or Charlie Green. The Muggins 78 is great, so I am going to post it on the other blog. I took it from Internet Archive.

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  5. Wow, wow, and wow! Thanks for this!

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  6. I don't think the tracks are obviously ID'd on the CCS CD as being released under a pseudonym. Maybe in the liner notes... Are they all on there? I'm not super clear on the releases or the timeline. SD was only on Capitol for a short time anyway.

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    1. Yeah, the four are there - he only did 20 sides for Capitol, all in 1949. The CD collects them. The notes and credits mention the aliases, but don't make a big deal out of them.

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    3. Thanks Buster. His "It Ain't Necessarily So" from the Porgy film completely blew me away. Great movie. Andre Previn arrangement.

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    4. Thanks, Joe - I may post the Porgy soundtrack LP, which is not in print, I don't think. Sam isn't on it though - he did his own LP for Decca.

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    5. The CD booklet is also on Internet Archive (along with 275,000 others). Their CDs only have 30-second samples of each track, but the booklets and back covers are fully viewable and downloadable in both JPG and PDF format.

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    6. Boursin - Thanks, I did not know that!

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    7. "It Ain't Necessarily So" sung by Sammy Davis, Jr. arr. Andre Previn from Porgy and Bess, 1959 film version, a bootleg video by necessity since the Gershwin estate has suppressed the film.

      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gC-vSZr_9Xc&persist_app=1&app=m

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  7. Great post and thanks for the link to my Sammy discography! I'd be keen to get in touch with your friend John, as his project is one I've been working on for some time. Always happy to help a fellow Sammy fan!

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    1. Jamie - Great discography! I found it invaluable.

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  8. I really enjoyed this one Buster... I also went to your other site and got the Shorty Muggins songs - - GREAT fun. His impressions album sounds like lots of fun too. Burt

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    1. Sky Raven - Yeah, Sam was the best. He was an entertainer literally all his life.

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  9. Many thanks for this, Buster. I also have the LP, but this saves me the trouble of remastering it!

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    1. SwingKing - You're welcome, and don't forget to listen to the singles!

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  10. Beautiful presentation of the great entertainer, good listening ahead, much appreciated, Buster.

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  11. Thank you, Buster. I miss Sammy.

    I think his "Mood to Be Wooed" is OOP, and worthy of posting.

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  12. Fantastic. Thanks so much Buster.

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  13. And Sammy Swings never made it to cd!

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    1. StealthMan - I am sure I have that one, too. Don't let me forget to transfer them.

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  14. Thank you very much for this post, Buster.

    Rich

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