Create account Log in

For Once In My Life

[Edit]

Download links and information about For Once In My Life by Vikki Carr. This album was released in 1969 and it belongs to Jazz, Rock, Pop, Classical genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 43:47 minutes.

Artist: Vikki Carr
Release date: 1969
Genre: Jazz, Rock, Pop, Classical
Tracks: 12
Duration: 43:47
Buy on Songswave €1.23
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. For Once In My Life / After Today 3:06
2. Happy Together 2:43
3. Yesterday I Heard The Rain (Esta Tarde VI Llover) 3:13
4. Come Rain Or Come Shine / This Girl'S In Love With You 3:13
5. It Must Be Him 5:10
6. Can'T Take My Eyes Off You 4:38
7. Days 2:37
8. Carnival (Manha De Carnival) 5:15
9. The Other Man'S Grass Is Always Greener 3:57
10. With Pen In Hand 4:17
11. Some Of These Days / After You'Ve Gone 3:03
12. For Once In My Life 2:40

Details

[Edit]

Recorded at the Persian Room of the Plaza Hotel in New York, For Once in My Life captures Vikki Carr's nightclub act of the late '60s. Carr scored a Top Five hit with the melodramatic torch song "It Must Be Him" in the fall of 1967. A year later, she showed herself to be a polished and professional show business entertainer. On record the act can seem somewhat artificial, as Carr introduces celebrities at ringside with effusive encomiums and rehearses some tired jokes. But what really matters is the singing, and she has a powerful voice and precise enunciation that accentuate the heartrending quality of her signature song and enable her to put her own stamp on covers of hits such as "For Once in My Life," "Happy Together," "Can't Take My Eyes off You," and "The Other Man's Grass Is Always Greener." She is equally effective on standards like "Come Rain or Come Shine" (offered in a medley with "This Girl's in Love With You"), "Some of These Days," and "After You've Gone," and she nods at her Mexican heritage with a Spanish version of the Portuguese song "Carnival (Manha de Carnival)" (aka "A Day in the Life of a Fool"), the theme from the film Black Orpheus. As a club act should be, this one is a demonstration of the varied talents of its star and a reflection of the times, mixing her own material with contemporary hits and old favorites. It no doubt worked better in the Persian Room than it does on record, but it remains an effective showcase.