Together

Maxine Sullivan Sings the Music of Jule Styne

With musical direction and arrangements by Keith Ingham

Tracks

  1. Sunday
  2. Just in Time
  3. Saturday Night
  4. Dance Only With Me
  5. It’s Been a Long, Long Time
  6. I Don’t Want to Walk Without You
  7. Bye Bye Baby
  8. Killing Time
  9. Talking to Yourself
  10. Papa, Won’t You Dance With Me?
  11. Things We Did Last Summer
  12. I’ve Heard That Song Before
  13. You Say You Care
  14. Distant Melody
  15. Together Wherever We Go

From Producers Ken Bloom, Bill Rudman and Keith Ingham:

We produced Maxine Sullivan’s collections of popular music by three ranking American songwriters from Broadway and Hollywood: Harold Arlen, Burton Lane and Jule Styne. The Styne disc, recorded in sessions held from June 1986 to January 1987, represents Maxine’s final studio work. Our collaboration with this luminous jazz singer could not have been more fulfilling. In late 1985, John S. Wilson noted in The New York Times that, at 74, Maxine was developing a new “vocal and emotional openness.” That attitude led to her adventuresome eagerness to tackle songs unlike any in her repertoire. Witness, on this album, her tough, bluesy “Talking to Yourself,” the back-room belt she chooses for “It’s Been a Long, Long Time,” her witty inventions in the title track and “Papa, Won’t You Dance with Me?,” and the depth and vulnerability she expresses in “Killing Time,” a song we proposed to her, never dreaming she would respond to its very contemporary musings.

But even more than the exhilaration that came with Maxine’s experimenting (she and Keith literally danced through the control room during the playback of “Papa”), what we’ll miss most is the sense she always projected of jazz as family. We remember an afternoon recording date when the sidemen arrived on time, but the singer was tardy. Hers was no star entrance, however. When she finally walked in, a pixie in blue windbreaker, gray jumpsuit, sneakers, and baseball cap, Maxine announced she was late because the subway was late. She tossed off a quick “How are you guys?”; she had worked with these musicians countless times. And Al Klink answered her query, “Fine, Max, now that you’re at the helm.” We felt the same way.
– July 1987

If you enjoy this recording you might also like Harbinger’s The Lady’s in Love With You: Maxine Sullivan Sings the Music of Burton Lane.

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