Dean Martin – The Dean Martin TV Show (1966/2014) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Dean Martin - The Dean Martin TV Show (1966/2014) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz] Download

Artist: Dean Martin
Album: The Dean Martin TV Show
Genre: Pop
Release Date: 1966/2014
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 96 kHz
Duration: 24:08
Total Tracks: 10
Total Size: 496 MB

Tracklist:

01. Dean Martin – If I Had You (02:36)
02. Dean Martin – What Can I Say After I Say I’m Sorry (02:02)
03. Dean Martin – The One I Love Belongs to Somebody Else (02:15)
04. Dean Martin – S’posin’ (02:31)
05. Dean Martin – It’s the Talk of the Town (02:22)
06. Dean Martin – Baby, Won’t You Please Come Home (02:08)
07. Dean Martin – I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face (02:15)
08. Dean Martin – Just Friends (02:42)
09. Dean Martin – The Things We Did Last Summer (02:44)
10. Dean Martin – Home (02:28)

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Released in 1966, The Dean Martin TV Show features Dean Martin in performance with the Les Brown orchestra, with arrangements by Ernie Freeman.For two and a half years following the spring 1964 release of “Everybody Loves Somebody,” Dean Martin cloned numerous successors to his comeback hit, all of them employing the prominent backbeat and vocal chorus, the triplets driving the rhythm, as well as a lengthy series of country-pop efforts that borrowed from the Nashville sound for a kind of Hollywood sound that might have made the country charts if the singer had not been the pride of Steubenville, OH, by way of Beverly Hills. Gold records rained down on Martin’s head during this period, but he largely ignored his core constituency, the adult pop audience that expected him to wear a tuxedo and sing staples of the Great American Songbook over a wash of strings as he had on his Capitol recordings of the 1950s. Using as an excuse a tie-in with his successful television series (although this is not a soundtrack album), Martin finally prepared just such a set of recordings on the LP called The Dean Martin TV Show. For the first time since 1964’s Dream With Dean, he applied himself to traditional pop standards as the drumkit remained discreetly in a timekeeping mode in the back. The result may not have been his best such LP (especially because, boasting only ten tracks, it was so short), but for his most faithful fans, it must have come as a considerable relief. ~~AllMusic Review by William Ruhlmann

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