Who remembers "Easy Listening" albums from the 50s-60s-70s?
I'm really showing my age here, but...
Who remembers easy listening music?
Groups like 101 Strings, orchestra leaders like Mantovani, Kostelanetz, Mancini, etc.? Or remembers some lesser-known arrangers/conductors like George Melachrino or Hugo Winterhalter?
Jackie Gleason had a bunch of albums, too. Readers Digest put out a number of CDs in the 90s, too.
My father loved this stuff. I rediscovered it a few years ago, and it sounds pretty good. Romantic, relaxing...just as advertised, easy to listen to.
A lot of this music is on YouTube, or you can buy CDs on Ebay if you don't like annoying ads.
Highly recommended when you need to unwind.
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I do a lot of crossword puzzles and Etta's name pops up frequently. But, I'd never listened to any of her songs until I gave your suggestion a shot. Great song! After that, Youtube suggested "I Just Want to Make Love to You" and that was very good, too. But, it reminded me to listen to my old Foghat tunes and I got lost in those for a while. Thanks for the suggestions!
I don't remember that term...the derogatory "elevator music" waws pretty common, though.
A lot of these orchestras (made up mostly of studio musicians, I believe) did record some lighter classical works. Strauss waltzes, tone poems, melodic pieces from operas and ballets, and overtures, for example.
They probably introduced a lot of people to more serious classical works. I know my first exposure to classical music was this way, and I became a lifelong fan.
Thanks for the tip! I'll look into that.
PML
Anothe great tune by Etta James is, "Damn Your Eyes"! Hope you like it!
P
I love anything by Jimmy Webb.
I was born in 1959, raised in the 60’s and 70’s and I always thought Easy Listening was soft rock & roll music. I am going to try this though.
"Dude, you are *not* old enough to remember easy listening from the '50s or '60s" is what I was thinking when I read the title of your thread. Then I read that your father was the source.
I confess that this music is not quite for me -- I was born in 1961, and some of it was definitely in the background of parts of my childhood (I remember being about 4 or 5 and becoming impatient with the 60-ish woman who was babysitting me bc she was watching Lawrence Welk instead of playing cards with me) -- but it's a fun thread. Thanks.
I recommend "I'd Rather Go Blind," from 1967. It's incomparable. *She* was incomparable.
Listened.
Liked !!
My optometrist is a big fan of hers, too.
I'll mention this song to him in January.
I love all the many record albums I've collected over the years. They go back a long way to when music was truly great. Also have sheet music from the 30's that my mother collected & I loved to play on our piano.