CD Details
- Released: March 14, 2006
- Originally Released: 2004
- Label: Collectables Records
- Original Album: Roulette SR-24123 (1961)
Description by OLDIES.com:
Jimmy Durante was an institution. He was as much of a part of showbusiness as any one performer, any one song, any one tradition. Year in and year out, one of the highlights of any entertainment season was Durante at the Copacabana. This album is a reissue of his classic 1961 album - a live on-the-spot recording with Durante at the Copa, recorded just as it happened - with all the songs, ad-libs, asides, jokes and confusion that only Jimmy could generate on the night-club floor.
Tracks:
- 1.Medley 1: I Could Have Danced All Night / It's My Nose's Birthday / Everywhere You Go
- 2.Medley 2: It's Still The Same Old Broadway / Every Street's A Boulevard / Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home / And They Became Good Friends
- 3.Medley 3: My Loving Melody Man / Rag Time Daddy / I Love You, I Do
- 4.Medley 4: She's A Little Bit This, A Little Bit That / Take Away The Beret
- 5.Medley 5: We're Goin' Home / Who Will Be With You / Don't Talk About Us When We're Gone /You Made Me Love You
- 6.Medley 6: Say It With Flowers / Ink A Dink A Doo / Goodnight, Goodnight
Product Description:
Personnel: Jimmy Durante (vocals, piano).
Liner Note Author: Jimmy Durante.
In 1961, Jimmy Durante could look back fondly on half a century of entertaining Gotham audiences, from a hot jazz combo way up in Harlem all the way down to his virtuoso ragtime solos at Coney Island (and including hundreds of venues in between). Nostalgia was never a pitfall with Durante, though. His stint at the Copacabana on E. 60th St. during the early '60s could hardly have been any less uproarious and chaotic than his earliest comedy acts. Immediately Durante reaches a gallop with "I Could Have Danced All Night," but stops the song after only a few bars with the blustery demand "Why should I sing this song and make it a big hit?!" (five long years after it had been a hit for anyone); he then launches into "It's My Nose's Birthday," stopping the show (and band) for a hearty laugh after delivering every punchline. Gimmicky yes, but Durante was also the consummate entertainer, knowing well how to start with the broad humor and save the subtleties (comparatively speaking, of course) for later. Reprising many of the routines of his vaudeville or radio-years act, the nearly 70-year-old Durante hits every gravelly note and times all of his lines perfectly; it's easy to see the comedy and performing smarts that had kept him working since World War I. He invites Eddie Jackson to the stage for a hilarious routine -- they had worked as Clayton, Jackson and Durante during the '20s -- and spends a few songs showing off the ragtime skills that made his name as "Ragtime Jimmy" 40 years earlier. Not just one of his most entertaining LPs, Jimmy Durante at the Copacabana is a defiantly unnostalgic look back to his boisterous youth, where his later standards records would reprise a balladry he had never previously focused on. ~ John Bush