A singer clearly influenced by Frank Sinatra, Bobby Darin could rival Ol' Blue Eyes at hard-swinging numbers, but when it came to emotional depth, that was a totally different matter. Critics have long pointed out that one of the main differences between Sinatra and Darin is that the younger singer wasn't as successful at creating a lingering mood through song and maintaining it during the course of a whole album. That is perhaps why Darin didn't usually record concept albums, which was home territory for The Voice. Yet Love Swings, an LP Darin cut for Atlantic in 1961, is the one worthwhile exception--a collection of twelve standards outlining the different stages of a love relationship, from the effervescence of its early stages to the sadness, melancholy, and acceptance of its eventual failure.
Anyone expecting an album of hard-swinging tracks is misled by
the title. While many of the songs are uptempo numbers, particularly the ones
depicting the early stages of love, there are also beautifully sung ballads
such as Isham Jones's "There Is No Greater Love" and Jerome Kern and
Leo Robin's often-overlooked "In Love in Vain." In general the
uptempo numbers ("Long Ago and Far Away," "I Didn't Know What
Time It Was," "How About You," "The More I See You,"
"It Had to Be You") appear in the first part of the album, coinciding
with the excitement brought about by love, while the more pensive tunes
("Something to Remember You By," "Skylark," "Spring Is
Here") surface on side B, as the relationship slowly begins to take a downturn.
But by this time Darin had learned Sinatra's lesson from the classic Songs for
Swinging Lovers that there is no reason why a sad song shouldn't swing, and so
we find here a nice uptempo reading of the Russ Columbo-associated "Just
Friends," which Chet Baker had also recorded in a fast-paced version for
Pacific a few years earlier. The album closes appropriately with a mid-tempo
rendition of the self-mocking, hopeful "I Guess I'll Have to Change My
Plan."
Arranger Torrie Zito |
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