プラターズ

The Magic Touch: An Anthology

プラターズ

50曲 • 2時間10分 • JAN 01 1991

  • 楽曲
    楽曲
  • 詳細
    詳細
楽曲
詳細
1
オンリー・ユー
02:37
2
Bark Battle And Ball
02:28
3
グレート・プリテンダー
02:39
4
I'm Just A Dancing Partner
02:14
5
マジック・タッチ
02:28
6
Winner Take All
02:07
7
マイ・プレイヤー
02:45
8
地上天国
02:33
9
グローリー・オブ・ラブ
02:45
10
ユール・ネヴァー・ネヴァー・ノウ
02:38
11
It Isn't Right
02:25
12
I Give You My Word
02:13
13
On My Word Of Honor
02:42
14
One In A Million
02:53
15
アイム・ソーリー
02:52
16
She's Mine
02:22
17
My Dream
02:38
18
I Wanna
02:49
19
Only Because
02:50
20
The Mystery Of You
03:01
21
Hula Hop
01:56
22
Helpless
02:40
23
Indiff Rent
02:16
24
No Power On Earth
02:57
25
おやすみなさい、もう帰って
02:18
26
トワイライト・タイム
02:45
27
You're Making A Mistake
02:45
28
My Old Flame
02:40
29
I Wish
02:43
30
It's Raining Outside
02:49
31
For The First Time
02:14
32
煙が目にしみる
02:38
33
No Matter What You Are
02:29
34
16トン
02:34
35
エンチャンティド
02:52
36
リメンバー・ホエン
02:49
37
Where
02:41
38
Wish It Were Me
02:40
39
My Secret
02:36
40
港の灯
03:11
41
スリーピィ・ラグーン
02:39
42
引き潮
02:25
43
夕日に赤い帆
02:21
44
トゥ・イーチ・ヒズ・オウン
02:49
45
If I Didn't Care
03:08
46
Trees
02:29
47
アイル・ネヴァー・スマイル・アゲイン
02:52
48
When You Return
02:37
49
It's Magic
02:31
50
Twilight Time (Spanish Version)
02:15
℗ This Compilation 1991 PolyGram Records Inc. © 1991 PolyGram Records Inc.

アーティスト略歴

With classics such as "The Great Pretender," "Only You," and their rendition of "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes," the Platters were one of the preeminent doo wop groups of the rock & roll era. Under the guidance of manager and producer Buck Ram, the Platters churned out hit after hit during the 1950s, bridging the gap between more traditional vocal-group stylings and the popular R&B grooves of the early '50s. Their sound was unique, marked by lead singer Tony Williams' powerful vocals and the feminine touch of singer Zola Taylor. Although competing versions of the Platters confused the public for many years, original founding member Herb Reed eventually solidified his rights to the name and the group continued recording and performing into the 2010s.

The Platters started out in 1952 as a Los Angeles-based doo wop group who made a few records for Federal, a subsidiary of Cincinnati's King Records. What changed their fortunes boils down to one very important name: their mentor, manager, producer, songwriter, and vocal coach Buck Ram. Ram took a standard doo wop vocal group and turned them into stars, and one of the most enduring and lucrative groups of all time. By 1954, Ram was already running a talent agency in Los Angeles, writing and arranging for publisher Mills Music, managing the Three Suns -- a pop group who had some success -- and working with his protégés the Penguins. The Platters seemed like a good addition to his stable.

After getting them out of their Federal contract, Ram placed them with the burgeoning national independent label Mercury Records (at the same time he brought over the Penguins following their success with "Earth Angel"), automatically getting them into pop markets through the label's distribution contacts alone. Then Ram started homing in on the group's strengths and weaknesses. The first thing he did was put the lead vocal status squarely on the shoulders of lead tenor Tony Williams. Williams' emoting power was turned up full blast with the group (now augmented with Zola Taylor from Shirley Gunter & the Queens) working as very well-structured vocal support framing his every note. With Ram's pop songwriting classics as their musical palette, the group quickly became a pop and R&B success, eventually earning the distinction of being the first Black act of the era to top the pop charts. Considered the most romantic of all the doo wop groups (that is, the ultimate in "make-out music"), hit after hit came tumbling forth in a seemingly effortless manner: "Only You," "The Great Pretender," "My Prayer," "Twilight Time," "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes," "Harbor Lights," all of them establishing the Platters as the classiest of all.

In 1961, Williams struck out on his own. By the decade's end, the group had disbanded, with various members starting up their own version of the Platters. Decades of competing versions ensued, until original member Herb Reed finally won a series of court cases. Reed, who died in 2012, restarted the group and patterned them on the original, with members including Wayne Miller, Valerie Victoria, Frank Pizarro, and Cheo Bourne, plus music director Michael Larson. In 2015, the only group authorized to perform as the Platters released Back to Basics Live! on the You Dig It label. The album included a pair of Grammy Hall of Fame songs "Only You (And You Alone)" and "The Great Pretender." Also included was a bonus track, the new Platters' recording of Lee Greenwood's "God Bless the USA" (lead singer Pizarro was a first responder at the World Trade Center in New York City on September 11, 2001). Sonny Turner, who replaced Tony Williams in the Platters' lineup, died on January 13, 2022 at the age of 82. ~ Cub Koda

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言語
English
カスタマーレビュー
星5つ
87%
星4つ
7%
星3つ
2%
星2つ
3%
星1つ
1%

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