Showing posts with label Barry Manilow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barry Manilow. Show all posts

Friday, January 9, 2009

Sometimes I Wonder ..


Random thoughts run through my head sometimes, as you can tell by my blog that I might think of a variety of things as any given time.

It is human nature for different "what if's" spring into your mind from time to time. Last night after my Statistics class, I was trying to come down from serious information overload, and my mind was racing. I got an email from a Barry friend and just a simple discussion sparked one thought to follow another.

I decided to write those wonderings down and put them out there, maybe you have thought of them too. I must forewarn you, some are silly, way out there, and then again - maybe not. hmmmmm

Does Barry ever drink the Manilow water from the M Store? What about the lip balm, to keep those lips from getting chap?

When Barry goes into Tempo, does he ever look out and just watch people like they watch him? Does he want to?

How many women REALLY want Barry's body and would they want him if he was Barry Johnson?

How many husbands are glad to see their wives go to Vegas to see Barry so they can enjoy their own extra curricular activities? (This includes chasing women that lust after them the way some of the wives lust after Barry)

Would some of the fans be able to say a complete sentence (that made sense) if Barry walked up to them and struck up a conversation?

When working on a show, does Barry factor in the screams, standing ovations, etc. into the time?

What are some of the code names that Security has for the fans they need to watch?

When Barry is standing backstage, what is going through his mind right before he steps out of the fog?

How easy is it for him to go from BARRY to Barry after a show?

During I Write The Songs when the glowsticks are waving and we are singing with him, what is going through his mind at that moment (hearing an entire room singing along with him)?


Have you ever thought the same thoughts? I bet some of you have.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

I Have Seen It All

A post was left of the memorial page for a 17 year old girl that lost her battle with cancer. The post was left by someone from the Manilow Network (I will not put her name up here) If by chance she is one of the many people that peek in and read my blog, I hope she knows what I am referring to her and is totally ashamed at her actions. Probably not, she had balls enough to put that on the woman's page, it won't make a difference.

To see the post, click on Just Life in my Barry Blogs listed. I'm telling you, it will boil your blood.

Am I shocked? Hell no I'm not shocked. Nothing from people surprise me anymore and definitely not the so-called Manilow fans.

I truly believe this post stepped over the line. Last night, everyone had different opinions about what happened or didn't happen. But this? This was just plain vile.

Karma's something else, you reap what you sow - I truly hope He has mercy on her when it comes back around because "oh boy" it's gonna come back around.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Greatest Songs of the Eighties


First let me say this cover...is my favorite, and the back it has become my newest favorite picture of Barry.

I have read a few reviews of the CD from others, and a song either makes me feel good and want to hear it again or it doesn't - so I am going to do something different with this review.

Since the 1980s was my high school time, I have memories attached to each song.

Islands in the Stream - I have to admit, I liked Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton's version so I had no doubts that I would enjoy it. I'm crossing fingers, toes, legs, and eyes in hopes that he sings this when I see him next month.

My first thought when I heard it - Seeing Dolly and Kenny on Solid Gold (remember that show, I cannot remember if Dionne Warwick was still hosting it or not) But, I remember seeing Dolly bounce in front of Kenny singing the song.

Open Arms - Love this one.

My first thought when I heard it - Watching this video on MTV. Steve Perry sang this song so differently, but his voice is very different than Barry's. Beautiful song, and the words would really be beautiful no matter who sang it (as long as they can carry a note).

Never Gonna Give You Up - Catchy song.

My first thought when I heard it - I, honestly, thought it was Barry White's song of the same title. I saw the title and thought how in the world Barry was going to pull that one off. He's good but come on Barry - Barry White? Then I found out it was Rick Astley's version. I said, okay then I still couldn't wait to hear it.

Have I Told You Lately - Love this one

My first thought when I heard it - I want to see him sing it live because of the piano solo in the middle. I can picture him with the spotlight on him, and that far away look he gets when he has climbed into a song.

I Just Called to Say I Love You - Stevie's version is still safe in my book. I just can't get it out of my head; I've tried to listen to it for it to grow on me, and it hasn't so hitting the forward button is what I'll do.

My first thought when I heard it - My niece was either 3 or 4. She loved this song, and she was just learning to dial the phone. Ours was the first one she learned. Whenever we picked up, she started to sing this song and being a toddler, she only knew the chorus, so we got it over and over again. LOL

Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now) - Love this one. One of my favorites on the CD.

My first thought when I heard it - Phil Collins. I went through a Genesis and Phil Collins period in high school, so this song was one of my favorites of his and still is.

Careless Whisper - This one is growing on me.

My first thought when I heard it - George Michael and was he gorgeous during that time? When I saw it on QVC, I knew it was going to have to grow on me. I just wasn't feeling it.

Right Here Waiting - Like this one.

My first thought when I heard it - High school prom and Richard Marx's hair.

Arthur's Theme - Love this one.

My first thought when I heard it - Dudley Moore's laugh. The movie was cute with he and Liza Minnelli, but his loud laugh is what echoes in my head.

Hard to Say I'm Sorry - Like his one.

My first thought when I heard it - Peter Cetera's version is still my favorite. Barry does a good job; I just cannot get the original out of my head.

Time After Time - Jury's still out on this one.

My first thought when I heard it - Cyndi Lauper's video with the trailer in the middle of the woods. I am on the fence on this one, not sure if I like it or not.

I've Had the Time of My Life - Like this one.

My first thought when I heard it - Dirty Dancing (of course) and why I cannot get the original version to stop playing in my head. After that, I like it slowed down, and the chuckle at the end is priceless.

******
The 80s was the MTV decade, so each of these songs had a video and you can tell that my memory of a couple of the songs was just that. I miss the videos because they used to tell the story of the song, and you got to see the artist (most of the time). I miss those days.

Overall, I enjoy the CD and have played it over and over. I guess I am one of the few that does not mind the cover songs. I think Barry has a way of making someone else's song his own and it takes you back to revisit songs that we sometimes forget about.

An original album would be lovely, but from the business standpoint, the original albums have not made the money of these cover albums. So, I totally understand the reason for them because in entertainment $$ is the name of the game. We all know it, so just deal.

Back to the CD cover shots - Of the decade CDs, my favorite cover was the 60s - until this one. Those eyes. The man can work a camera can't he?

Friday, November 14, 2008

James Has Manilow on iPod

CLEVELAND – Get this: LeBron listens to Barry Manilow. Or Brian Manilow.

A big fan of all styles of music, Cleveland's superstar always gets ready for games by listening to hip hop. On Thursday before facing the Denver Nuggets, James walked into the Cavaliers' locker room wearing headphones and bouncing as a track by rap star, Jay-Z, one of his good friends, blared in his ears.

James said Jay-Z is almost always his choice before taking the floor, but he has diverse musical taste and enjoys R&B and alternative rock. He was asked if he ever listens to sports talk radio on his way home after a game.

"Never," he said. "Ever."

James was then informed that Nuggets star Carmelo Anthony, his longtime friend and U.S. Olympic teammate, admitted last year that he had Barry Manilow's music on his iPod.

"I probably got a little of that," James said. "I bet you I can find it on my iPod."

"I bet you couldn't," a reporter said, challenging James, who then reached into a bag holding his personal player.

"Let's see," James said, scrolling through the menu. "Go ahead, ask a question. I'm going to look for it."

A few moments later, no luck.

"Nope," James said. "No Brian Manilow."

As the room broke up in laughter, James corrected his error.

"Oh, Barry Manilow," he said, smiling. "I was talking about his cousin."

James then continued his search, and sure enough, he came up with some Barry Manilow tunes, showing "Copacabana," "Mandy" and "I Am Your Child" on his varied playlist.

"I got everything," he said. "I got all music. I'm just going to listen to Jay-Z for right now."

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Manilow and Davis Reunite for the Greatest Songs of the Eighties


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

MANILOW AND DAVIS REUNITE FOR THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES

NEW BARRY MANILOW ALBUM SET FOR NOVEMBER 25TH RELEASE ON ARISTA RECORDS

• THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE FIFTIES
(#1 DEBUT, 2006)
• THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE SIXTIES
(#2 DEBUT, 2006)
• THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE SEVENTIES
(#4 DEBUT, 2007)

Classics from the ’80s – “Islands in the Stream” duet with Reba McEntire, “Never Gonna Give You Up,” “Careless Whisper,” “I Just Called to Say I Love You,” “Arthur's Theme (The Best That You Can Do),” “Time After Time,” “I've Had the Time of My Life,” “Against All Odds (Take A Look At Me Now),” AND MORE!

ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits –
Manilow’s new show begins his 5th sold-out year at Las Vegas Hilton

(October 16, 2008 – New York, NY) Grammy, Tony, and Emmy Award-winning Arista recording artist Barry Manilow just announced the release of his new album, THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES, a brand new 12-song collection that will arrive in stores on Arista Records on November 25th.

Working with longtime collaborator Clive Davis, Chief Creative Officer of Sony BMG Worldwide, Manilow and co-producers Scott Erickson and Michael Lloyd have crafted a CD collection of instant memories.

Special pre-order campaign for THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES at the www.amazon.com

THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES uncovers a bounty of treasures and reignites nostalgia for these fantastic hit songs reinterpreted by Manilow in his signature style - from his duet with Reba McEntire on “Islands in the Stream,” as they pay homage to Kenny Rogers & Dolly Parton’s #1 duet of 1983 – to a trio of songs associated with memorable films: Phil Collins #1 hit of 1984, “Against All Odds (Take A Look At Me Now)”; Bill Medley & Jennifer Warnes’ #1 hit of 1987, “I've Had the Time of My Life” (from Dirty Dancing); and Christopher Cross’ Oscar-winning #1 hit of 1981, “Arthur's Theme (The Best That You Can Do), ” and much more.

THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES is Manilow’s newest addition to the mega-best-selling series of tribute albums that he masterminded with Arista founder Clive Davis. Davis has been Manilow’s hitmaking collaborator on virtually all his recordings, since they first worked together on “Mandy,” his debut #1 single as the first artist signed to Arista by Davis in 1974, the first year of the label’s existence.

THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES continues the series that began nearly three years ago with The Greatest Songs Of The Fifties, which was certified RIAA platinum after entering the Billboard 200 at #1 in January 2006 (his first #1 album since Barry Manilow/Live in 1977). The Greatest Songs Of The Sixties (October 2006) entered at #2. When the RIAA platinum The Greatest Songs Of The Seventies entered at #4 (September 2007), he was distinguished as the only artist to chart three Top 5 debuts during 2006-2007.

THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES moves seamlessly through a selection of major hits from both sides of the Atlantic. The UK is well-represented by “Careless Whisper,” the #1 hit of 1984 by Wham! featuring George Michael; Rick Astley’s #1 “Never Gonna Give You Up”; and a song that Van Morrison first wrote and recorded in 1989, “Have I Told You Lately,” which later became a giant hit for Rod Stewart.

Manilow’s impeccable performances and signature arranging style also breathe new life into a quintet of American classics: “Open Arms” by Journey; Chicago’s #1 “Hard to Say I'm Sorry”; Stevie Wonder’s #1 “I Just Called to Say I Love You”; Cyndi Lauper’s #1 “Time After Time”; and Richard Marx’s #1 “Right Here Waiting.”BARRY MANILOW: THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES (tentative track listing and subject to change):

“Islands in the Stream” duet with Reba McEntire
“Open Arms”
“Never Gonna Give You Up”
“Have I Told You Lately”
“I Just Called to Say I Love You”
“Against All Odds (Take A Look At Me Now)”
“Careless Whisper”
“Right Here Waiting”
“Arthur's Theme (The Best That You Can Do)”
“Hard to Say I'm Sorry”
“Time After Time”
“I've Had the Time of My Life”

Friday, October 3, 2008

Barry Manilow: Yes, He Still Writes the Songs


By STEPHEN HOLDEN
Published: October 13, 1991 (New York Times)

Barry Manilow is a divided soul. Part of him wants to be the hit machine that cranked out 25 Top-40 hits between 1974 and 1984. The other part yearns to transcend the formula.

"It had gotten to the point where it wasn't art, and it wasn't music -- it was business," Mr. Manilow said recently. "I had made it so big and so fast that I lost my balance, and a lot of artists to whom that happens never find their way back home. Unless you're somebody like Sting, the art takes a beating. I think I became a rat. I lost a lot of friends. I was very scared and very unsure of everything."

In an interview in his midtown Manhattan hotel room, the 45-year-old pop star took pains to distinguish between what he called "the pop world" of hit songs like "Mandy," "I Write the Songs" and "Copacabana" and his more recent, open-ended pop-jazz albums.

Since his last Top-40 hit, "Read 'Em and Weep," in 1984, Mr. Manilow has largely abandoned the pop world that, during his golden decade, earned him millions of dollars and a heap of critical abuse. His two latest projects, "Showstoppers," a collection of theater songs, and "With My Lover Beside Me," an album he produced for the veteran jazz singer Nancy Wilson, find him frolicking in less commercially pressured musical climes. Like "Swing Street" and "2 A.M. Paradise Cafe," his previous excursions into the pop-jazz realm, the new albums should earn him more critical approval than his pop records have.

"It was like being in golden handcuffs," he said of his years as the No. 1 pop balladeer on Top-40 radio. "It's only recently I've figured out how to have my cake and eat it -- by being honest about my own musical desires and not just being led around by what I think the audience wants to hear."

The singer shrugged off the critical drubbing he received for his string of lachrymose ballads, which sounded like extended luxury car commercials delivered with pleading sincerity. Contributing to the critical scorn was the fact that Mr. Manilow's audience has always been largely made up of adoring women. At the peak of his popularity, his concerts drew the same piercing shrieks as the latest teen pop sensations. Mr. Manilow -- like other romantic pop smoothies from Eddie Fisher and Johnny Mathis to Engelbert Humperdinck and Julio Iglesias -- has always been an easy target for primarily male music critics.

Stylistically, Mr. Fisher is Mr. Manilow's closest antecedent, although the younger singer's talents include songwriting, producing and arranging. In that sense, Mr. Manilow is a combination of Mr. Fisher and his 1950's arranger and conductor, Hugo Winterhalter. For despite the slogging rock rhythms of Mr. Manilow's hits, his songs are firmly rooted in pre-rock soil.

The artistic seeds for "Showstoppers" and Miss Wilson's album were sown in the late 1950's, when Mr. Manilow was taken to see his first Broadway show (a revival of "Carousel") and his first jazz concert (the saxophonist Gerry Mulligan).

"In 'Carousel' what really got me was 'You'll Never Walk Alone,' " Mr. Manilow recalled. "I knew the song, but it was the first time I had heard it in a dramatic situation, and I was knocked out."

Echoes of that childhood epiphany ripple through "Showstoppers" (Arista 18687; all three formats), in which he sings 17 theater songs, many with a 50-piece orchestra. Structured like an original cast album, "Showstoppers" has an overture that pieces together 18 well-known Broadway overtures and is divided into two "acts" whose songs roughly suggest a classic boy-meets-girl, boy-loses-girl, boy-gets-girl musical comedy scenario.

Mr. Manilow is no Broadway belter, but his open-hearted, guy-next-door delivery infuses the songs with an amiable enthusiasm. The material spans nearly 90 years, from George M. Cohan's "Give My Regards to Broadway" to "Never Met a Man I Didn't Like," from the current hit show "The Will Rogers Follies," and includes a sparkling duet with Barbara Cook and a trio with Hinton Battle and Michael Crawford.

Mr. Manilow has already begun touring a concert version of the album with five singer-dancers and an ensemble of four synthesizers and a rhythm section. The show, which last month inaugurated the Paramount, the new 5,600-seat theater at Madison Square Garden, includes a segment in which Mr. Manilow reprises "Mandy" in the style of the barbershop quartet from "The Music Man."

By contrast, the Nancy Wilson album, "With My Lover Beside Me" (Columbia 48665; all three formats), due out next week, is a lush, low-keyed collection of 10 songs Mr. Manilow composed to accompany lyrics by the late Johnny Mercer.

Mercer, one of the more versatile American songwriters, was responsible for the lyrics for standards as wide ranging as "Accent-tchu-ate the Positive," "Laura," "One for My Baby" and "Skylark." When he died in 1976, he left behind a stack of lyrics, which his widow sent to Mr. Manilow eight years ago, hoping he might set some of them to music. They arrived out of the blue in the London office of Arista, Mr. Manilow's record company, while he was touring in England.

"There were about 50, and they came in a manila envelope with no note or anything," he said. "None of them had titles. Some were typed, but a lot were in Mercer's handwriting."
Intrigued, Mr. Manilow set three of them to music. One ballad, which he titled "When October Goes," was the best song on "Paradise Cafe," his 1984 pop-jazz album.

Last year a song set to a second Mercer lyric, "I Guess There Ain't No Santa Claus," landed on Mr. Manilow's surprisingly personal holiday album, "Because It's Christmas." Eventually, he set around 20 of the lyrics to music, put his favorites on a cassette and sent it to Columbia Records. The label was looking for material for Miss Wilson, who loved the songs. The match was made.

On "With My Lover Beside Me," Miss Wilson, who has moved toward ornate rhythm-and-blues singing in recent years, returns gracefully to her early-60's pop-jazz beginnings. Mr. Manilow and his talented collaborator, Eddie Arkin, have arranged the album's 10 songs into an elegiac suite for someone looking back nostalgically on youth and romance.
"When October Goes," with its wistful lyric, "It doesn't matter much how old I grow,/ I hate to see October go," reappears on "With My Lover Beside Me." The generalized sentimentality is similar to that of later Mercer lyrics, such as those for "The Days of Wine and Roses" and "Moon River." Miss Wilson's quiet, unadorned singing is stripped of the annoying affectations that mar her later albums, and Mr. Manilow's tunes, especially "Something Tells Me I'm Falling in Love" and "I Can't Teach My Old Heart New Tricks," have an effortless simplicity.

Setting the Mercer lyrics to music, Mr. Manilow discovered, was one of the easier tasks of his career. "The tunes came like that," he said, snapping his fingers. "I struggle with the pop stuff till I bleed, but this stuff . . . like that."

"Showstoppers" and "With My Lover Beside Me," along with his two earlier pop-jazz albums and the Christmas record, have led Mr. Manilow out of an artistic and personal cul-de-sac that he reached while at the height of his popularity.

"I wound up headlining at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas with a sold-out show, and I had never been so miserable," he said.

Mr. Manilow's lowest point came five years ago, after he ventured away from his longtime label, Arista, to a more lucrative deal with RCA. His one album for the label, "Manilow," was his first record not to produce a Top-40 hit. In leaving Arista, Mr. Manilow had temporarily left behind the counsel of Clive Davis, the label's commercially song-wise president, who had handpicked many of his hits.

"Since Arista was the only place I'd ever been, I didn't know any better," Mr. Manilow said. "It was a rude awakening to find that there was nobody out there like Clive. Until I lost it, I didn't realize I had become so attached to the popularity. I went down into a real deep depression." Psychotherapy, he said, brought him out of it.

Although Mr. Manilow went back to Arista, the hits never returned. He is still trying to recapture the top slot on pop radio. But whatever happens, he emphasized, he will never again limit himself to a narrow formula.

"In whatever I do, all I want is just to feel the passion," he said.
Both new albums have helped him realize the depth of his connection -- and the enormity of his debt -- to the past. Mr. Manilow's career is really a casebook study of how one pop tradition merges into another.

"When I was researching 'Showstoppers,' I was humbled by the amount of great material that comes from Broadway musicals," he said. "I had no idea how much those songs had influenced me. Every time I would listen to another cast album, I would see my own stuff coming back at me.

"In the way it starts low and builds and builds," he said, " 'You'll Never Walk Alone' is really the quintessential Barry Manilow record."

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Barry Manilow delivers on promise of instruments

By Bruce Fessier • The Desert Sun • September 29, 2008

Barry Manilow made good on his own bailout program today when the Palm Springs-based singer delivered $500,000 worth of musical instruments to 20 public schools.

With security fit for a high-ranking public official, Manilow stepped up to a makeshift stage and addressed a crowd outside of Palm Springs High School made up of students, band boosters and local school officials like a politician at a campaign stop.

"With a bunch of volunteers, we have been able to put together our own version of ‘Extreme Makeover: Band Edition," said Manilow, wearing sunglasses and a leather coat at the warm mid-morning event.

"So, now is the time to get those instruments to our kids. Drivers: Move those trucks!"

And with that, a caravan of trucks drove past the high school on Ramon Road, symbolizing the beginning of the delivery of the instruments.

Manilow said this campaign, called the Manilow Music Project, began with a telephone call — "one voice, I like to say" — about the plight of the Palm Desert Desert Middle School band program.

He and a few friends began looking at other local band programs and realized all were suffering from lack of funds.

His grassroots committee asked each school for a "wish list" for their music program. Manilow then went to one of his publishers, Hal Leonard Music, and the Yamaha company, which gives him discounts on instruments.

Manilow donated more than $10,000 per school, or roughly $250,000, and with sponsorships from Hal Leonard, Yamaha and the Toys ‘R Us Children’s Fund, that translated into $500,000 worth of instruments, music stands, sheet music and more.

Brian Foley of Indio Middle School got a tuba, marimbas, three flutes, three clarinets, a bass drum and a bass trombone for his program. He said he was grateful Manilow tried to help every school.

"It takes a community to have the arts happen," he said, "so, to have Barry Manilow do that for us — the entire valley instead of just select schools — is absolutely wonderful."

Students also seemed appreciative.

"He's a real inspiration," said Palm Springs High School junior Annalisa Cardenas. "He proved you can get where you want to go if you work hard enough."
Manilow said the hoopla over the announcement was just to inspire more people to support local music programs.

Manilow's publicist, Carol Marshall, said "Entertainment Tonight," "Access Hollywood" and "Extra" were expected to mention the giveaway tonight.

"I did this on a very grand scale," Manilow told the crowd, "but anybody can help out on a much smaller scale. Just call your school."

After the ceremony, with the Palm Springs High School Jazz Band playing while Manilow did interviews, Manilow said he may do more music projects in other regions.

"It all depends if I tour," he said. "If I actually went to a city that meant a lot to me, and I might be doing that next year, I might coordinate it for when I arrive at that city. I might actually make a donation to a local high school."

Sunday, September 28, 2008

The world is nutty, but in Barry we trust



By John Katsilometes
http://www.lasvegasweekly.com/blogs/the-playground/2008/sep/27/world-nutty-barry-we-trust/


Criss Angel and Barry Manilow performed new or newly revamped shows last night in Las Vegas. Of course, one is an enormously confident, supremely gifted performer on any stage whose holds a cult-like spell over his eerily loyal worldwide fan base.

The other is Criss Angel.

What to make of the success of Manilow at the Las Vegas Hilton? He opened in February 2005 in the theater made famous by Elvis, and has now been around long enough that his buoyant Music And Passion production actually went stale. So, last night, at a hotel in need of a lift after two heisters (and a person helming a get-away car) lifted anywhere between $100,000 and $500,000 in a morning sports book robbery, Manilow unveiled his new show, Ultimate Manilow – The Hits. The thieves might have made off with a huge financial haul, but it was Manilow stealing the hearts of “Fanilows” at the 1,700-seat Hilton Theater.

MoreLV Hilton Web siteTo me, the difference in the Music And Passion production and the new Ultimate performance is negligible. The theme of the theater has changed, in that the old Copacabana Bar is now the Ultimate Bar. The green glow-sticks so favored by Manilow devotees, now read “Ultimate MANILOW The Hits.” But it’s still Barry Manilow, singing songs familiar to anyone who has tuned in to over-the-air radio since 1975. He alternates from standing at the front of the stage, and sauntering far left and right to grip the outreached hands of fans in the up-close $225 seats (among the most expensive in the city), and tickling the ivories occasionally. There is less production hooey than the former show, not as much over-the-top costuming and elaborate dance numbers, with Manilow a more stationary subject, simply wading through his many classics. He dips into decade-pegged hits, reaching to the 1940s and moving through the 70s, the lone moment he strays behind his own famous catalogue. Manilow’s Songs of the Fifties debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard music charts, so he did the sensible thing and recorded Songs of the Sixties and Songs of the Seventies, hitting the top five with both. He promises Songs of the Eighties next, and I suggest the Clash’s Rock The Casbah lead off the album. He also resurrected his TV commercial medley that was a staple in his Manilow Live album from the late-70s. (He played the “stuck on Band-Aid/’cuz Band-Aid’s stuck on me” jingle, and here’s a fun fact: One of the guys in the shower in that commercial was a young John Travolta. Why I recall this now, I have no idea …)

As is the case with many pop icons, Manilow has a highly concentrated, fervent following. I’ve never quite figured out the Fanilows, some of whom traverse the globe to see Barry in person. I was talking about the Fanilows post-show, with veteran Vegas PR rep Frank Lieberman, and he noted that many top entertainers have huge fan clubs – Engelbert Humperdinck, David Cassidy and Wayne Newton (with his wild “Wayniacs”) among them. But, “Fanilows are different,” Lieberman said. “There are more of them.” Hundreds waited for a glimpse of Barry after last night’s show, which ended just short of 10 p.m. Knowing there was a post-show party at Tempo lounge, which sits near the theater entrance, the throng hung out for more than 90 minutes and threw out a cheer when Barry made his way past, a scant sighting that likely made the pilgrimage worthwhile.

I met Manilow afterward, for the first time. We talked for maybe a minute. I asked him what genre of music he liked that might surprise his fans (a couple of years ago he professed to be a fan of Scissors Sisters). “I like electronica. I love that. I’m really progressive about my music tastes.” I also congratulated him on the success at the Hilton (where he’s booked through the end of 2009) and noted that, in Vegas, there are not many entertainment certainties in uncertain economic times. “It’s a little strange around here,” I said. He laughed and said, “Hey, the world is a little strange right now.” But not Barry’s world. His dependability is the stuff of legends.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

What if...


The Manilow Network has a number of discussions asking “What If” questions about Barry.

What if you could choose another dance song?
What if Barry showed up on your doorstep?
What if you could run into Barry here or there?


I want to pose my own “What If” questions….

What if
Barry got bored one evening late at night and ventured onto the B-Net or the Manilow Network - just out of curiosity? (under a pseudonym of course, not Barry Manilow or Manilow - come on now why would he use his own name)

What if
Barry decided to end his run at the end of 2009 to concentrate on his music and/or produce the music of others? Or even try to get Harmony or other musicals on the stage?

What if
Barry made the announcement he had found that special someone and planned to spend the rest of his life with that person?

Did the questions make you think - how would I feel? Would I be happy? Would I be sad? Would I feel nothing? Would I be pissed?

Whatever your emotion, you have to admit that none of them are impossible. In this world, hell who really knows anything for sure. And, if I had a large amount of people wanting a piece of me like they want of him - I know I would want to just climb under the covers and never come out.

Hey, there are days I want to do that now!

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Ultimate Manilow


Posted by EditorChoice

Thursday, 04 September 2008

Following a three-year sold out run at the Las Vegas Hilton, Barry Manilow is returning with "ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits". With more than forty Top Forty Hit Songs, "ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits" at the Las Vegas Hilton is packed with Manilow's hits spanning his spectacular career. With worldwide sales of more than 75 million records, the success of Barry Manilow is a benchmark in popular music.

Barry Manilow and the Hilton Las Vegas re-enlisted SkyTag, the world's leader in supergraphic tallwalls, building wraps, and spectaculars, to do it again, in amazing fashion with the largest hand painted mural in Las Vegas.

For years SkyTag has teamed up with the best creative minds to construct these impressive and stunning visual sound bites that are seen, talked about, and heard around the world.


Website: http://www.skytag.net/
http://pr-gb.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=52924&Itemid=34

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Barry Friends Forever

Last night, a few of us gathered in my chatroom on Pal Talk and had a wonderful Barry time chatting and listening to Barry music.

Guess what? There was no fighting, no backstabbing, just a Barry luvin time with good friends.

Do we all agree? Nope.
Are we all alike? Nope.
Do we all have lustful fantasies about Barry? Nope.

We all just love the music, enjoy each other's company and know how to carry on conversations about a variety of things.

Our common link is Barry, but in talking with one another, we have found that we share other interests as well. A couple of us write, we love to travel, we swap books and many other things.

So thanks Barry for bringing these wonderful ladies in my life, and I sure hope that if you do look at the board do not think everyone acts the way displayed there because there are some nice, and sensible people in your fan club.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

A Singing Salesman Still Keeps Customers Satisfied




By Neil Strauss
Published: April 18, 1997 (New York Times)

"I haven't had a hit in 15 years and I've never been played on MTV," Barry Manilow told the sold-out crowd on Wednesday night at Radio City Music Hall. Mr. Manilow wasn't looking for pity: his show was full of his usual good-natured self-chiding about his treacly pop image. He was thanking the audience for sticking with him so long.

But he did have a point. From Burt Bacharach to Tony Bennett, popular culture has been busy reviving singers, arrangers and composers from the post-swing, pre-rock era of meticulous pop, a period that Mr. Manilow's swelling ballads look back to for inspiration. Maybe it's time for Mr. Manilow to be resurrected for a younger audience, even if it is as a kitsch icon with pop validity.

Wednesday's concert, the first in an eight-night stand that ends on Thursday, was Mr. Manilow at his most likable. The first half was set up like a game show, with a video screen onstage displaying the covers of Mr. Manilow's 28 albums. Before each song, an audience member was given a hand-held controller to use to select an album, from which Mr. Manilow would sing his next song. The lucky fans were also given a microphone, so that Mr. Manilow (a natural Broadway showman) could engage in witty repartee with them, though most were too awe-struck to utter a coherent phrase.

It was appropriate that the first album selected was Mr. Manilow's 1977 "Live," from which he chose to perform a medley of commercial jingles he had written or performed. The crowd sang along with Mr. Manilow's Band-Aid, Dr Pepper and McDonald's commercials as wholeheartedly as it did to "Mandy." This is because Mr. Manilow is a master melodicist and arranger, relying on soft, welling strings, crescendoing piano pumping and a mother's-boy baritone. Whether intended to sell fried foods or pop hits, it's a formula that never fails to fill the heart with the mundanity that feels like grandiosity.

Mr. Manilow was backed by a budget-size band (three synthesizer players, a drummer and a guitarist), and for "Copacabana," Rosie O'Donnell joined him, dressed up as a showgirl.

The second half of the show featured songs from Mr. Manilow's new album of cover songs from the 70's, "Summer of '78" (proof that he and I were listening to different radio stations that year), and his time-worn hits medley, which ends with "I Write the Songs." Mr. Manilow joked, "For those of you who were dragged here, this next batch of songs is going to be agony." But the truth is that the only thing agonizing about the medley was that he didn't play the songs in their entirety.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Ultimate Manilow



Last night was the first night of the new show entitled Ultimate Manilow: The Hits.

When the show was announced, if my memory serves me correctly, Barry said it would include more of his music. I believe that is all I remember, but the way Barry speaks there are always some extra adjectives thrown in there.

Getting back to last night, the fans filed into the theater, seeing the new set up…hearts all palpitating with anticipation of the new show that has been talked and raved about for weeks. For Pete’s sake, the man hasn’t been on stage for two months - he is going to come out and pull out all the stops.

The curtain goes up. The fog. Here he comes….

Fast forward to the reviews, the first few that I saw were not favorable…Why? Barry does not half step, what is going on? Someone even said that he appeared to not want to be there. What? Opinions are like asses, everyone has one, and that is just one person’s opinion. Then, I saw another review, the person was disappointed after falling for the hype and expecting a different show.

Rewind - Barry said the show would include more of his music. Didn’t he do that? Memory, Somewhere Down the Road, Ships, Even Now, WINE. I recall those used to get switched out in some shows right?

I have found some fans take everything Barry says so literal. Example: I remember reading an article where Barry was discussing the arena shows, he said in Vegas he has a time limit, and in the arenas he can play as long as he wanted. Also, the arena shows are a “blown up version” of the Vegas show. Well, the arena shows are still 90 minutes, we just have an opening act. There are a few more songs added, and the backups Copa costumes are WOW. Oh yeh, we do get an encore.

Complaining, no I am not. Just using an example of the comments placed in articles to get the fans to pack the place. Like anyone else, you have to take what is said as advertisement and something to entice you to buy a ticket to attend. Remember, Barry is an entertainer, but he does not entertain for free.

Hopes were high for an all new show. The reviews were a result of differences of opinions, albeit, the songs selected, the mood the reviewer was in - anything. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, and the differences in reviews show that people in the same theater will see and enjoy different things. It does not mean that either person is wrong or right. It means they have a difference of opinion.

The mention of enjoyment moves me to discuss the excitement of two of our younger Barry fans. Reading their blog made me smile because you could feel the emotion, and that is what Barry is about. He obviously felt that excitement because of the interactions they received from him. He made their night, and gave them memories they will never forget. Surely, the attention Barry gave them ruffled some feathers, and the ugly green monster of jealousy poked his head out (and it is probably still out).

Jealousy in the Manilow world is another blog all together and frankly I don’t have the energy tonight.

You know as a writer, for many years, I would write and keep it for myself. No one read anything I ever wrote for pleasure - why? Because I was afraid they’d read it and say “ewwww” or “I don’t get it.” Finally, a few years ago, I allowed a friend to read it and she said “why have you been hiding this for so long?” Others have read stories and commented on them. I won a couple of writing contests - so I might not be too bad after all.

I said that to say, artists (whether musical, written or visual) put all they have into their craft in hopes that people will like it, that it will touch someone, or just give them inspiration. What if you put your energy into something to have it shot down? To hear it really wasn’t that great? Or they were disappointed? I know how I would feel - and it isn’t a good feeling.

Barry has performed sick, he has traveled in snow and rain - when he doesn’t have to. I am confident when I type this, he gives us his best when he steps onto that stage. If he wasn’t feeling it, really - he doesn’t have to get out there and I truly believe that he wouldn’t.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

You've Got to Have Friends



A friend and I were talking this weekend about what else? BARRY

We were discussing how he surrounds himself with loyal individuals. Camp Manilow reaches far, however, it is a small camp which explains how things stay pretty close to the vest.

Intricate details about Barry do not slip out. You do not hear about any fights within the camp either. If there are, we would never know about it. That is wonderful, and it goes to speak about the type of person Barry is.

Over the last week or two, there has been so much talk about Barry being this or being that. The only thing we can all agree on is - he guards his privacy to a fault.

Personally, I believe the Barry we see on stage, at functions, at meet and greets and platinum - is not the same Barry that is with his close group of friends. Yes, it more controlled settings he is not the “blown up Manilow” but he is still ON, and performing to a degree.

The Barry with his friends can be himself without every action being picked apart and being analyzed. His real friends are there when he is being a geek, and goofy, and even in a bad mood. You don’t hear about it. Do you know why? Because they are not advertising their friendship - they don’t need to. A real friend of Barry’s would not boast about it, they would not take every opportunity to say “Oh, I talked to Barry today.” Or, “I spoke to Barry and told him thus and so.”

I remember hearing a story in a play I attended. The character equated relationships with people to a tree.

Leaves - these people go whichever way the wind blows - meaning you cannot depend on them.

Branches - these people can fool you. You think they are stable but just when you depend on them, the branch breaks.

Roots - these people are there with you until the end. They are behind the scenes, I.e., the roots of the tree are below the ground but they are holding you up. They do not need to be seen or heard, you just know they are there. These “true” friends do not need to advertise they know you, and don’t care if anyone knows they know you.

Weird analogy, but looking at it - doesn’t it hit the nail on the head?

I have people around me that fall into each one of those categories. We all do, yes, even Barry. Thankfully, each one of us do not have to worry about the “root” people in our lives because they are not going out and telling our business, telling everyone that will listen different things about us. You will not have a lot of “root” people in your life, but the ones you have are there through thick and thin.

They are there - no recognition required.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Her Name is Lola ....



Cartoon Courtesy of http://www.cartoonstock.com/directory/b/barry_manilow.asp

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Flashback to 1985




Pop Idol Barry Manilow has fallen in love. Last night as more than 11,000 fans waited for him to appear on stage in Birmingham, he invited me backstage to meet the new girl in his life.

Dark-haired, brown-eyed Dana Robbins from Los Angeles was hired by Barry as a backing singer for his tour - and he ended up falling for her. Would he be taking Princess Diana's advice when she recently told him he should get married and have someone look after him?

Excited

He laughed: "I have no marriage plans at the moment, but my mother sure has!

"She has met Dana and already she's getting all excited at the prospect of a wedding."

Millionaire Barry, 38 (41?) married a childhood sweatheart when he was 22, but the marriage lasted only a year. He was since been linked with American television producer Linda Allen and Hollywood funny girl Roberta Kent.

Article from Sunday Mirror

Friday, August 22, 2008

Manilow turns Copacabana into a TV musical



COURIER POST
Cherry Hill, NJ
October 18, 1985

Manilow turns Copacabana into a TV musical

He waited years for the right idea

By Chuck Darrow

"For me personally," offers pop music superstar Barry Manilow with an "aw, shucks" grin, "I just like a challenge. I don't like to be bored. I like to cause trouble and I just pick these places where I can cause trouble."

The challenge of which Manilow speaks is Copacabana, a made-for-television musical which will air on CBS-TV on Tuesday, Dec. 3. Not only is the script based on the song of the same name (which was a Top Ten hit for Manilow several years ago), but the film also marks the acting debut of the skinny singer-composer who, for the past decade, has been one of the world's most successful recording artists.

According to Manilow, who begins a weekend stand at Caesars' Casino in Atlantic City tonight, Copacabana isn't just a quickie, only-in-it-for-the-bucks project.
He says the movie, which co-stars Annette O'Toole and Joseph Bologna, represents the end of a long search for the right vehicle with which to make his debut as a television star.

"I had a deal for four (television) specials, but I couldn't think of what to do," explains Manilow. "I couldn't think of something fresh that hadn't already been done.

"I had one or two offers a year, but they didn't turn me on. They were nice, but they didn't say what I wanted them to say. Then, two years ago, I made a phone call to Dick Clark (executive producer of Copacabana) and said we ought to develop Copacabana as a movie. We took it from there.

"I wanted to do it because Copa was part of my soul -- the song and I were one. It's an important song to me and I felt very close to it. It's more important to me than (the movie) Used Cars which was one of the things I was offered."

Copacabana is a literal translation of the song which tells the tale of singer-dancer Lola Lemar (sic) (O'Toole), and Tony Starr (Manilow) a piano-playing songwriter, who meet and fall in love at the famed Copacabana nightclub in the late 1940's, only to have their dreams of love and stardom shattered when a gangster (Bologna) who is in love with Lola murders Starr in a fit of jealous rage.

The film was done in a style highly reminiscent of the Hollywood nightclub musicals of that era, and while some viewers may feel the piece is a send-up of those movies, Manilow insists that Copacabana was made as a tribute to those types of films, and not as a campy parody.

"I'm not a crazy movie buff," he says, "but there was a color and a texture that I wanted for Copacabana. But it never entered anybody's mind to do it as camp. We've given a little nod to 1940s' films, but it wasn't meant to be campy.

" 'Camp' to me is insulting. We were serious, but we were trying to compliment the 1940s. We were trying to do a real 1940s' musical. We weren't being campy at all."
Though he waited a long time to take the acting plunge, Manilow was well-prepared. For the past five years, he has been taking acting lessons which, he says, have helped him on the concert stage as well as in front of the camera.

"I had been kvetching for years about doing a movie, but I realized I wouldn't be able to do it without taking lessons. I just knew that someday someone was going to present me with a script I really liked, and I wanted to be prepared.

"The lessons really turned me on. I really enjoyed getting into another character."
Despite the lessons and the fact that he has performed live for millions of people, Manilow claims that nothing prepared him for his first day on the set of Copacabana, during which he suffered a case of stage fright.

"I rehearsed with the script, but nothing could compare with that first day when they said, 'Action!' It was a little nerve-wracking having to work with 75 people watching. But it was just that first time, then it got easy."

The acting may have gotten easy, but seeing the result for the first time was yet another shock for the man who has recorded such smash hits as Mandy, I Write the Songs, Weekend in New England and Read 'Em and Weep.

"The first time I saw Copacabana I winced and gagged and hated every second of it," he admits. "It's a big shock seeing your face the size of a whole apartment building. Everything is magnified, and after watching it the first time, I ran the other way. You just don't expect half the things you see.

"Each time, though, it got better and better -- but I don't know how to assess myself as an actor."

The verdict on Manilow as an actor won't be in until after Copacabana airs, but there's no question among his millions of fans as to his worth as a musical performer. Though it is quite fashionable among music critics to dismiss him as a hack writer whose lyrics and melodies can be dangerous to diabetics, his audience is as loyal and vociferous as Bruce Springsteen's, and this weekend's set at Caesars -- his first local appearance in four years -- is sure to delight those in attendance.
Manilow promises a brand new show as far as staging is concerned and adds that while he will perform many of his most popular numbers, this tour is a bit different musically from previous outings.

"It's a brand new concert," he says. "It's up-tempo, a rock 'n' roll concert -- as rock 'n' roll as I can get." He adds that he will also include some material from his forthcoming album, Manilow, which will be released on Oct. 28.

While most entertainers who play the casinos often have to alter their material for a gambling crowd, Manilow feels he doesn't have to worry about changing his show, because wherever he plays, his hard core fans -- mostly young females -- are sure to be there.

"My audience shows up at the casinos," he says with the boyish grin that sets so many female hearts a-flutter. "So it's not an older audience when I play casinos. It's the same bunch of crazos -- but lovely crazos."

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Tune up for Jazz in the Pines festival in Idyllwild



But he knows from past visits to the alpine community that this is going to be his kind of festival.

Koz, a Los Angeles native, just played a gig last weekend at a Temecula winery. He plays 25 to 35 gigs every summer, and many of them are at wineries.

"There's a magic thing that happens between sun and wine and music and the outdoors," Koz said. "It's a beautiful thing, and it really makes for a lovely experience."

Jazz in the Pines will feature sets of music over two days in indoor settings and a meadow among giant evergreens on the Idyllwild Arts Academy campus

Koz, who came up with fusion and R&B bands and has played with rock bands, says “nothing can transplant being out in the middle of nature in a beautiful environment listening to music that is inspiring as much as the environment is.”

He said he appreciates the bebop that was played late at night in smoke-filled nightclub cellars but the new contemporary jazz, or smooth jazz, seems ideally fitted to beautiful outdoor locations such as Idyllwild or the California wineries.

"There are some gigs you have to (do) for routing," he said, "but there are always favorites. The ones we all look forward to are the ones that provide the musician with a little extra additive inspiration. If you're really taken care of and it's beautiful and everybody's having a great time, it's just going to be that much better of a show."

Koz's favorite gigs include the Robert Mondavi Winery in Napa, Golden Gate Park in San Francisco and the Planting Fields Festival in Oyster Bay.

He said he also likes playing the Palm Springs Smooth Jazz Festival.

Koz's father was an L.A. physician, and he loved taking his family to Palm Springs.

"We used to go there constantly, all year round," he said. "We'd rent a little place for the weekend. It's ironic. My dad was a dermatologist, and he loved to be in that sun."

Koz has become friends with Barry Manilow in the desert. Manilow has said he discovered Koz while listening to Jim Fitzgerald's local morning show on KJJZ-FM, and they wound up playing on each others' CDs.

Koz offers several saxophone solos on Manilow's upcoming "Greatest Hits of the Eighties."

Koz says another of his favorite live performances was indoors at the McCallum Theatre when Manilow decided to make a "surprise" appearance.

"I knew it was going to happen, but no one else did," Koz recalled. "He's a good friend, and we had this idea of him popping up in the middle of my show and saying, 'I want to do something.' And he launched into a song. The crowd went berserk. It was absolutely hysterical."

http://www.mydesert.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2008808200357

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Surprise!


You wouldn't believe where I've been, the cities and towns I been in, from Boston to Denver and every town in between.

The people they all look the same, only the names have been changed.


Think of how many faces he sees, over the course of a week, month, year, number of years. It is overwhelming isn’t it? To our family, friends, associates - of course we are remembered. Why would Barry remember me? And if he does, would it be a good memory? Hopefully, but if he saw me and said “You again?” Oh my God, I would just have to be scraped off the floor from sheer embarrassment.

I am sure there are people he remembers, either because of a funny conversation they had, or something they possibly wore that was totally different or outrageous. Then, there are those he remembers for less than flattering reasons - whatever they are.

In thinking about it, I just don’t know if I would really want to take that chance. I love Barry’s music and his performances but my adoration stops there. I do not want to jump his bones, or be his friend, I do not need to have him ever say my name again. Would it be nice, sure of course it would. But, I live in the real world and I know that no matter how much one may wish for those things, Barry’s world is a small encapsulated space that no one can venture unless he lets them in.

So, just for a little perspective - single state lotteries usually have odds of about 18 million to 1 while multiple state lotteries have odds as high as 120 million to 1. Chances of being Barry's friend is higher than that.

Guess I will go out and buy a lottery ticket. I suggest that to quite a few others do the same.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

The Appeal of Manilow



Last week, there was a lot of talk about the appeal of Barry to women and men, and its differences. As with anything, the comparisons are subjective and based on the individuals point of view.

My feelings on the appeal of Barry is that he is different things to different people, not necessarily all male or all female.

In the cases of:

Sex appeal - Barry is seen as sexy by both male and female. There are men AND women wanting his body and having fantasizes about him. While, there are men AND women who do not.

The music - The last time I looked, there were male and female musicians, so Barry’s artistry, musical talents and skills are admired by both. I surely cannot see the admiration being able to be measured by either sex.

The shows - How can admiration be measured between the sexes and a decision be made at which sex loves him more? The last show I went to, there were older gentlemen on the row in front of me dancing and singing along like the rest of us.

Sure, Barry’s fan base is largely female. Those numbers are the only thing measurable.

Adoration can’t be. Enjoyment can’t be. Fantasies and dreams can’t be.