Mel Torme – …Loves Fred Astaire aka …Sings Fred Astaire

More Pop and Jazz Vocal Recordings

  • Torme’s 1957 release, here with solid Double Plus (A++) sound of BETTER throughout this vintage 70s Bethlehem reissue pressing
  • Turn it up and The Velvet Fog will be standing right between your speakers, putting his heart and soul into these American standards
  • Lovely richness and warmth, you may just find yourself using it as an analog Demo Disc – Mel is in his prime and magnificent throughout
  • 5 stars: “Featuring an artist at the peak of his ability and talent, a collection of top-drawer songs from the best pop composers ever, and a swinging ten-piece that forms the perfect accompaniment, Sings Fred Astaire is one of the best up-tempo vocal albums ever recorded.”

The notes for the original pressing we played can be seen above. We’ve played them before with similar results, so I doubt we will be buying them in the future.

It’s not a bad sounding pressing — with grades of 1.5+ on both sides, it fits comfortably in our section for good, not great sounding LPs — but the right reissues from the 70s are a big step up in class sonically.

They represent yet another example of a vintage reissue — accent on the word “vintage” — handily beating the early pressings.

There are a number of budget reissues of vocal music with excellent sound that we’ve discovered over the years, and some of them, counterintuitively with respect to the conventional audiophile record collecting dogma from which many in our hobby suffer, are the best sounding versions that we know of.

What the Best Sides Of …Sings Fred Astaire aka …Loves Fred Astaire Have To Offer Is Not Hard To Hear

  • The biggest, most immediate staging in the largest acoustic space
  • The most Tubey Magic, without which you have almost nothing. CDs give you clean and clear. Only the best vintage vinyl pressings offer the kind of Tubey Magic that was on the tapes in 1957
  • Tight, note-like, rich, full-bodied bass, with the correct amount of weight down low
  • Natural tonality in the midrange — with all the instruments having the correct timbre
  • Transparency and resolution, critical to hearing into the three-dimensional studio space

No doubt there’s more but we hope that should do for now. Playing the record is the only way to hear all of the qualities we discuss above, and playing the best pressings against a pile of other copies under rigorously controlled conditions is the only way to find a pressing that sounds as good as this one does.

Learning the Record

For our shootout, we had at our disposal a variety of pressings that had the potential for Hot Stamper sound. We cleaned them carefully, then unplugged everything in the house we could, warmed up the system, Talisman’d it, found the right VTA for our Triplanar arm (by ear of course) and proceeded to spend the next hour or so playing copy after copy on side one, after which we repeated the process for side two.

If you have five or more copies of a record and play them over and over against each other, the process itself teaches you what’s right and what’s wrong with the sound of the album. Once your ears are completely tuned to what the best pressings do well that the other pressings do not do as well, using a few carefully chosen passages of music, it quickly becomes obvious how well a given copy can reproduce those passages. You’ll hear what’s better and worse — right and wrong would be another way of putting it — about the sound.

This approach is simplicity itself. First, you go deep into the sound. There you find a critically important passage in the music, one which most copies struggle — or fail — to reproduce as well as the best. Now, with the hard-won knowledge of precisely what to listen for, you are perfectly positioned to critique any and all pressings that come your way.

It may be a lot of work but it sure ain’t rocket science, and we’ve never pretended otherwise. Just the opposite: from day one we’ve explained step by step precisely how to go about finding the Hot Stampers in your own collection. Not the good sounding pressings you happen to own — those may or may not have Hot Stampers — but the records you actually cleaned, shot out, and declared victorious.

What We’re Listening For On …Sings Fred Astaire aka …Loves Fred Astaire

  • Energy for starters. What could be more important than the life of the music?
  • Then: presence and immediacy. The vocals aren’t “back there” somewhere, lost in the mix. They’re front and center where any recording engineer worth his salt would put them.
  • The Big Sound comes next — wall to wall, lots of depth, huge space, three-dimensionality, all that sort of thing.
  • Then transient information — fast, clear, sharp attacks, not the smear and thickness so common to these LPs.
  • Tight note-like bass — which ties in with good transient information, also the issue of frequency extension further down.
  • Next: transparency — the quality that allows you to hear deep into the soundfield, showing you the space and air around all the instruments.
  • Extend the top and bottom and voila, you have The Real Thing — an honest to goodness Hot Stamper.

Side One

Nice Work If You Can Get It
Something’s Gotta Give
A Foggy Day
A Fine Romance
Let’s Call The Whole Thing Off
Top Hat, White Tie And Tails

Side Two

The Way You Look Tonight
The Piccolino
They Can’t Take That Away From Me
Cheek To Cheek
Let’s Face The Music And Dance
They All Laughed

AMG 5 Star Rave Review

Though it’s sometimes relegated to second or third place among Tormé’s best albums of the 50s (behind Mel Tormé and the Marty Paich Dek-Tette and It’s a Blue World), it’s difficult to hear how Mel Tormé Sings Fred Astaire can’t be the best album of his entire career. Featuring an artist at the peak of his ability and talent, a collection of top-drawer songs from the best pop composers ever, and a swinging ten-piece that forms the perfect accompaniment, Sings Fred Astaire is one of the best up-tempo vocal albums ever recorded.

Coming hot on the heels of Mel Tormé and the Marty Paich Dek-Tette in 1956, this tribute to Hollywood’s most stylish dancer finds Tormé obliging with his nimblest and most elegant singing. Even while Marty Paich’s band takes “The Way You Look Tonight” and “Cheek to Cheek” at a breakneck pace that Astaire himself would’ve had trouble with, Tormé floats over the top with death-defying vocal acrobatics. He’s breezy and sophisticated on “They Can’t Take That Away from Me,” ecstatic and effervescent on “Top Hat, White Tie and Tails” (matching an exuberant solo by trumpeter Pete Candoli), and even breaks out an affectionate croon for “A Foggy Day.”

A collection of perfect hard-swinging pop with a few ballads thrown in for good measure makes Sings Fred Astaire a masterpiece of the vocal era.


Further Reading

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