
Though he was diagnosed in 2016, Bennett’s family only publicly shared the news in February 2021.Īs footage of the pair dancing, singing and laughing together plays in the trailer, Bennett has nothing but kind words to say about Gaga.

The pair went on to record the album between 20, when Bennett was privately dealing with his Alzheimer’s. It is something that should be coveted so sacredly forever.” “I really want young kids to listen to jazz music, because it’s important,” Gaga says of her reason for making the album. “It is not something that should be left behind. In the trailer, Gaga reveals that the album was Bennett’s idea, one that he shared with her a day after Cheek to Cheek‘s debut, and she quickly jumped at the opportunity to work with him again. On Tuesday, the singers released a trailer for their Cole Porter tribute album, Love For Sale, which is a follow-up to their 2014 album, Cheek to Cheek. The saxophone solo is clearly being played on an alto and has been credited as such.and yet the instrument filmed "playing it" is a tenor.Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett are teaming up one last time. Whereas the more reverent, curatorial approach of today’s arrangers and producers just seems to have less ambition about it.Īnd an aside: there is a curiously annoying blooper on the video of title track "Love for Sale". The freshness of the older account holds the attention completely, more than six decades after it was recorded. But go back to the version of this song from 1957 on the album The Beat of My Heart: it is not just better paced, it also has some wonderfully insane voice-and-drums sparring (I presume with Art Blakey). Yes, for his age, Tony Bennett is in astonishing vocal form on “Just One of Those Things”. The new, latin version of this song from 2021 feels plodding and formulaic compared to Sharon's beautifully paced go-for-it voice and piano version on the album Steppin’ Out from 1993.Īnd comparisons going further back have a way of bringing back more Cole Porter glories from the past. And yet, in retrospect Ralph Sharon, Bennett’s East-End (of London)-born music director from the Sixties onwards had more of a spirit of adventure than his modern counterparts. That does raise an interesting question: how does the new, monumental Bennett at 90+ compete with versions of Cole Porter from his own back catalogue? The lyric of “I Concentrate On You (“When fortune cries 'Nay, nay to me/ And people declare ‘You're through' " ) clearly has more resonance when uttered by a reflective senior citizen. At his age it’s understandable, but a shame nonetheless. There are also lapses though: “So In Love”, sounds like it was recorded too late in a session, at a point when Bennett’s energy for the day had been spent. One genuinely touching moment is in the verse of “I Get a Kick Out of You” where Bennett finds that authentically urgent and passionate vocal colour he had in tracks such as “A Child is Born” or “Make Someone Happy” on the classic album Together Again with Bill Evans. Not all the tracks are duets there are solos for each of the singers in turn.

The arrangements mostly alternate between Basie-ish swing for quartet or small band, and a smoochier vibe with studio orchestra textures in which “with strings”, gloops of swoopy countermelody and reharmonisation are contrasted with flutes or oboes, vibes and piano. That said, the video version of the title track does have her strangely whirligigging her arms. This is a calmer, less histrionic album than its predecessor. It is as if there is less need now (for Gaga) to strain, to "act", find different idioms, to prove anything. And the Bennett/Gaga partnership has also evolved. The fact that the album stays in the elegant yet turbulent world of Cole Porter makes it a more convincing piece of work than Cheek to Cheek from 2014. True, Bennett recorded less Cole Porter than Sinatra, but he is such an appealing character, and he can give such wonderful empathy to a lyric, that is perhaps the main joy here. All ten tracks on the album – there are 12 on the “de luxe version” – are by Cole Porter. The good thing about the new album Love for Sale (Streamline) is that it has a unifying theme.
