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Burt BacharachBurt Bacharach is, quite simply, one of the most accomplished composers of the 20th Century. In the '60s and '70s, Bacharach was a dominant figure in popular music, writing a remarkable 52 Top 40 hits. In terms of musical sophistication, Bacharach's compositions differed from much of the pop music of the era. Bacharach songs typically boasted memorable melodies, unconventional and shifting time signatures, and unique chord changes. Combining elements of jazz, pop, Brazilian music and rock, Bacharach created a unique new sound that was as contemporary as it was popular. Lyricist Hal David, Bacharach's primary collaborator, infused Bacharach's music with tart, melodramatic lyrics worthy of the best Tin Pan Alley composers. David's bittersweet, unsentimental lyrics were often in striking contrast to Bacharach's soaring melodies. While in the late 1970s Bacharach's name became synonymous with elevator music (due in great part to its sheer familiarity), a closer listening suggests that his meticulously crafted, technically sophisticated compositions are anything but easy listening.The son of nationally syndicated columnist Bert Bacharach, Burt Freeman Bacharach was born in Kansas City, Mo., on May 12, 1928. In 1932, Bacharach's family moved to Kew Gardens in Queens, New York. At his mother's insistance, he studied cello, drums and then piano beginning at the age of 12. As a youth, Burt hated taking piano lessons. His dream was to play professional football, but his size, or lack thereof, kept him out of that field. As a teenager, Bacharach fell in love with jazz and sometimes used a fake ID to sneek into 52nd Street nightclubs to see bebop legends like Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker. Bebop's unconventional harmonies and melodies were a major influence on the young composer. When he was 15, Bacharach started a 10-piece band with high school classmates. With Burt on piano, the group gained exposure playing parties and dances. After graduating from Forest Hills High School, Bacharach enrolled in the music studies program at McGill University in Montreal. It was there that Burt says he wrote his first song, "The Night Plane to Heaven."
Bacharach went on to study theory and composition at the Mannes School of Music in New York City; at the Berkshire Music Center; and at the New School for Social Research, where he studied under composers Bohuslav Martinu, Henry Cowell and Darius Milhaud (whose influence on Bacharach's style is apparent in his work). He was also awarded a scholarship to the Music Academy of the West in Santa Barbara, Calif. From 1950-52 Bacharach served in the Army, playing piano at the officer's club on Governor Island and in concerts at Fort Dix. His perfomances then consisted primarily of improvisations and pop medleys of the day, although he was billed as a concert pianist. While serving as a dance-band arranger with the Army in Germany, Bacharach met vocalist Vic Damone. After their discharge, at the age of 24, Bacharach became Damone's piano accompanist. He also worked nightclubs and restaurants and accompanied performers including the Ames Brothers, Imogene Coca, Polly Bergen, Joel Grey, Georgia Gibbs, Steve Lawrence and a young singer named Paula Stewart. Bacharach and Stewart were married in 1953 (they divorced in 1958).
From 1958-61 Burt toured Europe and America as musical director for Marlene Dietrich. During this period, three Bacharach-composed songs became big hits: "Please Stay" by the Drifters, "Tower of Strength" by Gene McDaniel (with lyrics by Bob Hilliard) and "Baby It's You" by the Shirelles (lyrics by Hal's brother Mack David and Barney Williams). All three were recorded in 1961. In 1962, Bacharach collaborated with lyricist Bob Hilliard on "Any Day Now," which reached No. 23 for Chuck Jackson, but his greatest success was achieved in collaboration with Hal David, who co-wrote the No. 4 hit "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance," inspired by the John Wayne/James Stewart movie, and the No. 2 hit "Only Love Can Break a Heart." Both were recorded by Gene Pitney. Bacharach & David also scored a hit that year with Jerry Butler's "Make It Easy On Yourself," which reached No. 20. Besides their work writing and producing albums for Warwick, the team of Bacharach & David was also responsible for hits with other performers, including Jackie DeShannon ("What the World Needs Now"), the Fifth Dimension ("One Less Bell to Answer"), Manfred Mann ("My Little Red Book"), Bobby Vinton ("Blue on Blue"), Herb Alpert ("This Guy's in Love With You"), Tom Jones ("What's New, Pussycat?" "Promise Her Anything"), Jack Jones ("Wives and Lovers"), Dusty Springfield ("The Look of Love") and B.J. Thomas ("Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head"). Other performers covered Bacharach composition to chart-topping effect, including the Walker Brothers (whose version of "Make It Easy on Yourself" hit No. 16 in 1965), the Carpenters (whose version of "[They Long to Be] Close to You" hit No. 1 in 1970), and Sergio Mendes & Brasil 66 (whose version of "The Look of Love" hit No. 4 in 1968).
In 1968, producer David Marrick recruited Bacharach & David to work with playwright Neil Simon on a musical version of the 1960 Billy Wilder film The Apartment. The result was the Broadway musical Promises, Promises, which ran for three years and 1,281 performances and won two Tonys and a Grammy for best cast recording.
In 1973, Bacharach & David collaborated on a high-profile musical version of the 1937 film Lost Horizon. Producer Ross Hunter's Lost Horizon was a resounding flop with both critics and the public. The soundtrack failed to generate a significant hit (although the 5th Dimension's cover of "Living Together, Growing Together" reached No. 32) and Bacharach privately complained about the difficulty working with actors who were not trained singers. In the wake of Lost Horizon, Bacharach, David and Warwick went through a bitter professional divorce, with Warwick suing Bacharach and David, David suing Bacharach and Bacharach countersuing David. In 1975, Bacharach & David wrote and produced Stephanie Mills' album "For the First Time," but the new partnership failed to match their previous success with Warwick. In 1977, Bacharach released his sixth solo album, Futures, and in 1979 he released Woman, an ambitious song cycle recorded in a single four-hour session with the Houston Symphony. In
1979, Bacharach collaborated with Paul Anka for the soundtrack to the
Italian film Together?.
The soundtrack garnered a minor hit for Burt with Jackie DeShannon's "I
Don't Need You Anymore," which reached No. 86 in 1980.
In 1982, Bacharach composed the music for Ron Howard's Night Shift, which first introduced "That's What Friends Are For" (performed on the soundtrack by Rod Stewart), and, in 1988, the music for the sequel to Arthur, Arthur 2: On the Rocks. In 1985, Bacharach and Sager composed the title theme to the TV series Finder of Lost Loves, which was a minor hit for Dionne Warwick. Bacharach and Sager divorced in 1991.
Bacharach has been involved in thoroughbred racing as an owner and breeder for more than 30 years, and his horses have competed in some of the sport's most prestigious events. Burt's Heartlight No. One, a three-year old filly named for his hit collaboration with Neil Diamond, was a thoroughbred champion in 1983, and his horse Soul of the Matter was a Breeder's Cup starter in 1994 and 1995. In 1993, Bacharach emerged from a relatively quiet period in his career with a number of new projects, most notably a reunion with Hal David and Dionne Warwick for the song "Sunny Weather Lover" from Warwick's Friends Can Be Lovers album. He also wrote two songs for James Ingram's Always You album: "This Is The Night" (Bacharach, Ingram, Bettis) and "Sing for the Children" (Bacharach, Ingram, Bettis). Both were produced by Thom Bell. That same year he wrote "Two Hearts" (White, Bacharach, Bailey) for Earth, Wind and Fire's album Milennium. He also wrote "Don't Say Goodbye Girl (Walden, Bacharach, Dakota) for Tevin Campbell's album I'm Ready in 1993. During this period, Bacharach also worked with lyricist B.A. Robertson, of Mike + the Mechanics, on a modern musical retelling of Snow White that apparently was shelved. By all indications, Bacharach has undergone a remarkable resurgence in popularity in recent years, with alternative acts such as Pizzicato Five, Oasis, REM, Stereolab, Faith No More, Yo La Tengo, Ben Folds Five, the White Stripes and John Zorn each paying homage to Bacharach in interviews and through recordings.
In January 1996, Burt was the subject of a BBC documentary, Burt Bacharach--This Is Now, which was later broadcast in America on "Great Performances." For an appearance in London at the Royal Festival Hall in June 1996, Oasis' Noel Gallagher joined Burt onstage to croon "This Guy's In Love With You." (A photograph of Bacharach appears on the cover of the band's 1994 record Definitely Maybe). On Dec. 31, 1996, Burt and Dionne Warwick performed a special concert, "Live from the Rainbow Room," which was broadcast on the American Move Classics cable television network. In 1997, Bacharach made a memorable cameo appearance in Mike Myers' film Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, further cementing his reputation among a new generation of fans. In November 1997, Burt hosted a tribute concert at New York's Hammerstein Ballroom. The concert, taped by TNT and recorded for the CD and video Burt Bacharach: One Amazing Night, featured Bacharach songs sung by stars including Sheryl Crow, Chrissie Hynde, Mike Myers, Barenaked Ladies, Luther Vandross, David Sanborn and George Duke, All Saints, Wynonna, Elvis Costello, Ben Folds Five, Dionne Warwick and Bacharach himself. "Burt Bacharach: One Amazing Night" aired on TNT in April 1998. In November 1998, Rhino Records issued The Look of Love: The Burt Bacharach Collection, a three-disc anthology of Bacharach's work spanning his entire career, from "The Story of My Life" (Bacharach's first Top 40 hit) to 1998's "God Give Me Strength."
In 1998, he and Elvis Costello collaborated on a rendition of "I'll Never Fall in Love Again" for the soundtrack to the Austin Powers sequel "The Spy Who Shagged Me," and the duo makes a cameo appearance in the film as well. In 2000, Burt composed the score and reunited with Hal David and Dionne Warwick for two songs for Isn't She Great, a film based on the life of novelist Jacqueline Susann. A Tribute to Burt Bacharach and Hal David, a July 2000 concert at Royal Albert Hall featuring Bacharach along with Dionne Warwick, Elvis Costello, Petula Clark and others was released on CD and DVD in 2001. Jazz vocalist Diana Krall recorded "The Look of Love" as the title track to her 2001 CD. A musical based on Bacharach and David's music, What the World Needs Now, opened in Sydney, Australia, in August 2002. In 2002, Bacharach appeared for the third time in an Austin Powers movie, turning up as the credits rolled on "Austin Powers in Goldmember" (which also included a rendition of "Alfie"--recast as "Austin"--sung by Susanna Hoffs). Burt also reportedly began a collaboration with rapper Dr. Dre, composing melodies over drum loops supplied to him by Dre. In May 2003, The Look of Love, a musical built around the songs of Bacharach & David, opened at the Brooks Atkinson Theater, bringing the music of Bacharach back to Broadway for the first time in 35 years. The show, which Burt had no personal involvement with, got mostly poor reviews and closed on June 29. In July 2003, Bacharach went into Capitol's legendary Studio A and B, the site of classic sessions by Nat King Cole and Frank Sinatra, to record a CD with vocalist Ron Isley. The result is the DreamWorks Records release Here I Am, which features Isley's soulful vocals on 11 classic Bacharach compositions along with two new songs. Produced by Bacharach and featuring new arrangments, Here I Am proves that, after 50 years in the business, Bacharach's talents as a composer, producer, conductor and arranger are undiminished. In December 2003, a television special, McCormick Present Burt Bacharach: Tribute On Ice, aired on NBC. The special featured world-class skaters including Brian Boitano, Ilia Kulik and Nicole Bobek performing live accompanied by Bacharach and vocalists James Ingram and Michael McDonald. In November 2005, Bacharach released At This Time, the first solo album to be released under Bacharach's name in 26 years. The record--which included contributions from Dr. Dre, Chris Botti, Elvis Costello and Rufus Wainwright--was the first of his career to feature lyrics written by Bacharach himself. Those lyrics--and Burt's public comments on the political and social situation that inspired the lyrics--generated a great deal of controversy and led to At This Time being labeled Burt's most political record. The controversy apparently didn't affect members of the Recording Academy, which in February 2006 awarded At This Time the Grammy for Best Pop Instrumental Album. Bacharach was also nominated in the Best Pop Instrumental Performance category for the track "In Our Time," a collaboration with Chris Botti. In April 2007, Bacharach contributed several songs to New Music From An Old Friend, a CD on 180 Music that features new compositions and collaborations between legendary songwriters including Brian Wilson, Kris Kristofferson, Carole King, Paul Williams and Willie Nelson. For more information on Burt's recordings, see either the abridged hit list or the chronological discography, which compiles Burt's recordings, original versions and covers. To search for Bacharach recordings by artist, visit Stefan Wesley's Hitmaker Archive. Burt's official press kit bio is available here. Special thanks to Ken Miller, Jeff Gower, Brennan Young and Paul in Milan for help in putting together this bio. |