Even Now

Even Now

by Barry Manilow
Even Now

Even Now

by Barry Manilow

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record - 180 Gram Vinyl / Colored Vinyl)

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Overview

When disc jockey Brian Goslow left the Willie "Loco" Alexander MCA Records sessions for Meanwhile...Back in the States in 1978, he couldn't escape Barry Manilow's "Copacabana (At the Copa)" on the radio. Like a scene out of a movie as the radio station changed, the same song came blaring out of the speaker -- showing the radio power of Barry Manilow in 1978 -- every underground radio programmer's nightmare. Manilow had injected semi-disco into his previous albums, but this was an all out dance assault exacerbated by a 12" Spanish version, "En el Copa," also finding popularity. With a Number One live album following up the previous studio disc, This One's for You, another year's worth of hits launched off of Even Now, with the title track going Top 20 after the Top Three showing of a pop masterpiece, Barry Manilow's rendition of "Can't Smile Without You." Clive Davis must have heard Engelbert Humperdinck's excellent album track from his 1976 comeback, After the Lovin', and with a little change in the original lyric a superb pop confection manifested -- a sophisticated "Jingle Jangle"/"Sugar Sugar" produced by the singer of those Archies' hits, Ron Dante, along with Manilow. The pair didn't stop there. They took Helen Reddy's 1975 Top 20 version of "Mandy," cowriter Richard Kerr's "Somewhere in the Night" Top Ten in early 1979 (after Manilow charted with a song from the film Foul Play in between the four-song chart run from this LP). Yes, there are still excesses on the Even Now album (one being the successful "Copacabana,") lows that go hand-in-hand with incredible highs like "Can't Smile Without You" and "Somewhere in the Night," popular music that is as timeless and effective as it gets. Marty Panzer and Barry come up with a very impressive cocktail lounge essay, "I Was a Fool (To Let You Go)," while another Manilow cowrite, "Losing Touch," displays some progress in the songwriting department for the showman. England Dan and John Ford Coley songwriter Parker McGee lends his excellent "Where Do I Go From Here" with Jimmie Haskell orchestration to the mix and it works, bringing back that query from the previous album -- why didn't Barry Manilow cowrite with the talented songwriters who gave him some of his finest moments? ~ Joe Viglione

Product Details

Release Date: 10/06/2023
Label: Music On Vinyl
UPC: 8719262028180
Rank: 45879

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Barry Manilow   Primary Artist,Piano,Vocals (Background)
Paul Shaffer   Guest Artist,Piano (Electric)
Lee Ritenour   Guest Artist,Guitar
Bill Mays   Keyboards
Jimmy Maelen   Percussion
Jimmy Young   Drums
Laura Creamer   Vocals (Background)
Jay Graydon   Guitar (Acoustic)
Ron Dante   Vocals (Background)
Mitch Holder   Guitar
Bob Babbitt   Bass
Will Lee   Bass
Alan Estes   Percussion
Linda Dillard   Vocals (Background)
Dick Winzeler   Fender Rhodes
Ginger Blake   Vocals (Background)
Ronald Zito   Drums
Jeff Mirinoff   Guitar

Technical Credits

Barry Manilow   Composer,Producer,Liner Notes,Cover Design,String Arrangements
Chris Arnold   Composer
Will Jennings   Composer
Geoff Morrow   Composer
David Martin   Composer
Wally Traugott   Remastering
Ron Dante   Producer
Jimmie Haskell   Orchestration
Richard Kerr   Composer
Marty Panzer   Composer
Michael Delugg   Engineer
Bruce Sussman   Composer
Bruce Roberts   Composer
Dan Walsh   Composer
Jack Feldman   Composer
Parker McGee   Composer
Carole Bayer Sager   Composer
Adrienne Anderson   Composer
Artie Butler   Orchestration
Lee Gurst   Photography,Cover Design
Dick Berkhe   Orchestration
Enoch Anderson   Composer
Derek Dunann   Assistant Engineer
Susan Mendola   Design,Reissue Design
Michael Price   Composer
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