Michael Ricci


Biography, Tony


Tony Bennett turns 81 this year and amidst the tributes, honors and
accolades, the world's most down-to-earth living legend is celebrating
this milestone the same way he essentially lives his life: enjoying each
moment to the fullest, weathering the storms with good cheer and
optimism, and connecting to people everywhere through the magic of
his music and the power of his art.

“Mr. Bennett,” wrote Stephen Holden in The New York Times (August 2,
2006), “has steadfastly remained the embodiment of heart in popular
music. He pours it into every note he sings and every phrase he swings
with a sophistication that deepens his unguarded emotional directness.
In the polluted sea of irony, bad faith and grotesque attitudinizing that
pop music has become, he is a rock of integrity.”

As he has done virtually every year or so since the 1950s, the forever
young octogenarian has recorded a new album, an unaffected and
unabashed exaltation of what he calls “the Great American Songbook,”
a timeless treasure trove of standards, classics, and sometimes
overlooked gems of traditional pop and swinging jazz.

This year's Tony Bennett album, Duets - An American Classic (the
artist's 13th new studio collection since returning to Columbia Records
two decades ago), finds the maestro reprising some of the best-loved
songs in his repotur
i duets performed with some of the top names in
contemporary music: Bono, Michael Bublé, Elvis Costello, Celine Dion,
Dixie Chicks, Billy Joel, Elton John, Juanes, Diana Krall, k.d. lang, John
Legend, Paul McCartney, Tim McGraw, George Michael, Sting, Barbra
Streisand, James Taylor and Stevie Wonder. Instrumental musical
guests Tony's on Duets - An American Classic include trumpeter Chris
Botti and violinist Pinchas Zukerman.

Tony recorded this landmark album in three locations in early 2006:
Capitol Studios in Los Angeles; Bennett Studios in Englewood, New
Jersey; and Abbey Road Studios in London. Producer Phil Ramone
supervised the sessions, which, in keeping with a longstanding Bennett
tradition, were recorded live, with each guest artist performing side-by-
side with Tony. Tony's touring quartet -- Lee Musiker on piano, Gray
Sargent on guitar, Paul Langosch on bass and Harold Jones on drums  
provided the basic accompaniments.

Tony's sons helped out with Duets - An American Classic, making the
album a Bennett family affair. The record was recorded and mixed by  
Bennett at  Bennett Studios in Englewood, New Jersey and executive
produced by Danny Bennett, who's served as Tony's manager for more
than two decades. With a set list of songs lovingly selected from the
innumerable high points of Tony's six decades as a recording legend,
Duets - An American Classic is a fitting crescendo to a career that only
grows stronger with time.

“They were all rather quick,” said Tony of the Duets sessions, “but one
that knocked me out was the Dixie Chicks. They told me they'd never
done anything like this before.” Tony was referring to his duet with the
Dixie Chicks on the album's opening track, “Lullaby of Broadway.” (The
Harry Warren-Al Dubin composition from the Busby Berkeley film, “Gold
Diggers of 1935,” had been a highlight of his 1957 album, The Beat of
My Heart, a conceptual masterpiece which showcased drumming by
legends like Art Blakey, Jo Jones, Chico Hamilton, and Sabu and
established Tony Bennett as a premier jazz vocalist.)

“Smile,” Tony's duet with Barbra Streisand, also has cinematic
overtones, having been penned by Charlie Chaplin for his classic 1936
film “Modern Times.” “This was a bull's-eye as far as I'm concerned,”
Tony commented on Streisand's performance. “She's always good, but
this sounded to me like a home run in the way our voices blended. And
what I like about 'Smile' is that it's timeless. 'Smile' is what it's all about:
'You find life is still worthwhile, if you just smile.'” (Bennett had a hit
single with a solo version of “Smile” in 1959.)

Tony's outlook on life resonates in “Put On a Happy Face,” his duet with
James Taylor. ”Part of my personal philosophy as an entertainer is to
stay optimistic about things, that there's a light at the end of the tunnel
no matter how bleak things get,” says Tony. “What I like about what
happened with James Taylor is that I never knew that he was such a
great improviser. He's a natural as good as any jazz soloist I've ever
heard. He's very spontaneous and never sings the same way twice, and
there's always a new thought coming into his mind. There's a nice,
natural way about him, and he's so intelligent.” (Tony previously
recorded “Put On A Happy Face,” a song from the 1960s musical “Bye
Bye Birdie,” as a duet with Rosie O'Donnell for his 1998 album The
Playground.)

Bennett paired off with Paul McCartney on the incomparable standard,
“The Very Thought of You,” penned by the  composer/bandleader Ray
Noble. “Ray also wrote the big swing tune 'Cherokee' and was the
equivalent in England to Cole Porter,” said Bennett. “'The Very Thought
of You' is a gorgeous song that Paul specifically wanted to do with me
and it was a knockout doing it with him. We did it at Abbey Road, so
right away he got very nostalgic telling me where John and the rest of
them stood when they recorded there. When I first came to Britain, I was
at Wembley Stadium and they told me to give some awards to some new
artists two big groups. One was the Beatles and one was the Rolling
Stones, so I gave them their first music awards. And when I looked at
the Beatles who were just getting popular I looked at the guy in the
middle and felt instinctively that he was going to make it because he had
that look and spirit about him, and it was Paul. And I still feel that way it
was very easy to sing with him.”

Tony revisited his 1965 hit, “The Shadow of Your Smile,” as a duet with
the Latin crossover sensation Juanes. “To me, Johnny Mandel is just
the best composer of contemporary music that I know of,” said Bennett
of the song's composer (Paul Francis Webster penned the lyrics).
“'Emily' and 'A Time for Love' are beautiful songs that will eventually go
into the American Songbook like those of Gershwin and Porter. But what
I had fun with was Juanes. He's one of the nicest performers I've ever
met. I had to sing Spanish phonetically with him, and he helped me so
much to make sure I got the right pronunciation.”

For their track on Duets - An American Classic, Tony Bennett and Elton
John re-recorded Tony's smash single, “Rags to Riches,” which held
down the #1 spot on America's charts for eight weeks in 1953. (Tony's
solo version may be heard in the soundtrack to Martin Scorsese's 1990
film, “Goodfellas.”) “Elton sat down at the piano after saying hello, then
played the whole thing and said, 'Let's do it,'” Tony observed, “and it
was done in three takes.”

Piano man Billy Joel proved equally at ease working with Bennett on a
new version of “The Good Life,” a huge hit for Bennett in 1963. Working
with Joel, said Bennett, “was terrific. I like Billy personally, we get along
great, and I consider him a major talent. He's just a natural, and he
knew exactly what to do.”

Tony returned to one of his very first hits, his pop version of Hank
Williams' “Cold, Cold Heart,” for his duet with contemporary country star
Tim McGraw. “The song's a masterpiece,” affirmed Bennett, who, to this
day, revels in retelling how Hank Williams actually called him in 1951 --
when Tony's cover version was in the middle of its six week run at #1 --
and told him, “Thanks for ruining my song.” “The two immortals in my
mind are Billie Holiday, from Harlem, and Hank Williams, from the
South,” Bennett continues. He points out that his link with the country
music crowd was recently refreshed when Tim McGraw introduced him
in the audience at his concert at Madison Square Garden. “The place
went crazy,” Tony laughs, “but Tim's a great guy. He's very authentic,
and he sang just wonderfully--and we had a lot of laughs.”

Tony Bennett and Diana Krall teamed on a new interpretation of “The
Best Is Yet To Come,” Cy Coleman and Carolyn Leigh composition
which Bennett turned into an enduring standard via his 1962 album, I
Left My Heart In San Francisco. “Diana's a great jazz singer, and her
piano playing gets better and better every year,” says Tony. “She just
sat down at the piano and played, and it was just so natural and perfect
and there was a lot of ad-libbing and it ended up being a joy.”

Many of the songs on Duets - An American Classic were first
introduced to the public by Tony Bennett. In fact, Tony had
experienced some chart success with his 1967 version of “For
Once In My Life” more than a year before Stevie Wonder made it
one of his signature songs. Tony and Stevie perform it together
on Duets - An American Classic. “Ron Miller a very nice guy-
composed it,” Bennett recalls.
“I was at a supper club in Detroit
The Roostertail
and Ron said, 'I have a song you might like.' I
heard it and said that I'd love to record it and he was thrilled.
Then Stevie, who was still very young, put a beat behind it when
Motown was coming into its own and he sold millions. So this is
such a wonderful thing that we both recorded it together. Stevie
slipped in three notes of 'I Left My Heart in San Francisco' into
his harmonica solo and we all got a laugh. I consider Stevie
Wonder one of the great jazz artists of all time--and such a
thoughtful, beautiful human being.” (Tony and Stevie worked
together on “Everyday (I Have The Blues),” a track on Bennett's
2002 Grammy-winning album Playin' with My Friends: Bennett
Sings the Blues”.)

Elvis Costello, who contributed to Tony's 1994 Grammy-winning Album
of the Year, MTV Unplugged, collaborates on “Are You Havin' Any
Fun?,” a song that first appeared on 1958's groundbreaking Basie
Swings, Bennett Sings. Tony Bennett was the first male pop star to sing
with Count Basie. “Elvis just went in,” says Tony, “and we did it and it
came out just right.”

k.d. lang, one of Tony Bennett's favorite singing partners, and jazz
trumpeter Chris Botti join the master on a new version of his 1951
breakout smash, “Because of You,” which spent 10 weeks at #1 and
established Tony as one of the nation's most popular male vocalists. k.
d. performed with Tony on his Grammy winning MTV Unplugged and cut
a Grammy-winning album with him, A Wonderful World, 2002. “She did it
so relaxed and with so much feeling,” Tony reveals, “and Chris played
beautifully.”

Contemporary crooner Michael Bublé was enlisted to team with Bennett
for the Duets recording of his 1956 hit “Just in Time,” a Betty Comden-
Adolph Green-Jule Styne composition from “Bells Are Ringing,” one of
the many Broadway classics that have been introduced by Bennett. “I
have a lot of faith in Michael,” said Tony of the rising young pop
vocalist. “He's like a performer from the old school very smart, very
intelligent.”

One of Tony's very first singles, the regional hit “Boulevard of Broken
Dreams” from 1950, has been recast in 2006 as a duet with Sting. “It
was the first record I made on Columbia after [legendary A&R executive]
Mitch Miller heard my demo and signed me up at the same time as
Rosemary Clooney,” Tony remembers with a smile. “We were the first
American Idols. What happened with Sting and what I hope for with any
duet is to be different. Our voices are different, and it's that contrast
that makes for a good duet. The perfect example is Ella [Fitzgerald] with
Louis Armstrong gruff with sweet. What I love about is Sting is right away
you know if I'm singing or Sting is because of the contrast, and that's
what I wanted to get on all the duets. And I loved his interpretation: It's
completely different than the way I'm singing, and that difference makes
for a good duet.”

Bennett teamed up with another UK superstar, Bono, for the update of
his Top 20 1963 hit “I Wanna Be Around.” “Bono is different, too,” he
said. “He's such an international artist because of the politics.”

Representing a new generation of recording artists, John Legend joined
Bennett on “Sing You Sinners,” one of the songs included in Bennett's
historic 1962 At Carnegie Hall concert album. “I think he'll cross all the
lines,” Bennett predicted, sensing Legend's potential for film stardom as
well as his already established stature as a Grammy-winning singer-
songwriter. “He's a great composer, and a very relaxed performer.”

For Duets, Tony revisited his 1962 signature hit “I Left My Heart In San
Francisco,” which his longtime musical director/pianist Ralph Sharon
had uncovered in a drawer before bringing it to a young Tony Bennett
more than forty years ago the rest being history. Taking over Sharon's
role on the new recording is the young jazz piano lion Bill Charlap, “who
I consider to be the next Bill Evans,” opined Bennett.

The album fittingly includes “How Do You Keep The Music Playing,” the
poignant Alan Bergman/Marilyn Bergman/Michel Legrand standard
which Tony traditionally uses to close his concerts. (The song was a
centerpiece track on Tony's 1986 return-to-Columbia Records album,
Art Of Excellence.) Tony joined forces with George Michael on this
track. “He made a perfect recording,” said Tony.

That simple observation sums up the artistry of Duets - An American
Classic.
“The artists all loved the way we recorded, and many said they'd like to
record the way I do,” said Bennett. “They didn' t realize the amount of
preparation that goes into it, and were surprised at the way we recorded
live with just my original quartet.” This, of course, is the way that Tony
Bennett has always made his records.

Tony Bennett is an artist who moves the hearts and touches the souls
of audiences. He's the singer's singer and has received high praise
from his colleagues through the years, including Frank Sinatra who
stated unequivocally, “Tony Bennett is the best singer in the business.”
He is an international treasure who was honored by the United Nations
with their “Citizen of the World” award, which aptly describes the scope
of his accomplishments.

The son of a grocer and Italian-born immigrant, Anthony Dominick
Benedetto was born on August 3, 1926, in the Astoria section of
Queens. He attended the High School of Industrial Arts in Manhattan,
where he continued nurturing his two passions -- singing and painting.
His boyhood idols included Bing Crosby and Nat King Cole, both big
influences on Bennett's easy, natural singing style. Tony sang while
waiting tables as a teenager then performed with military bands during
his Army enlistment in World War II. He later had vocal studies at the
American Theatre Wing school. The first time Bennett sang in a
nightclub was 1946 when he sat in with trombonist Tyree Glenn at the
Shangri-La in Astoria.

Bennett's big break came in 1949 when comedian Bob Hope noticed
him working with Pearl Bailey in Greenwich Village in New York City. As
Bennett recalls, “Bob Hope came down to check out my act. He liked my
singing so much that after the show he came back to see me in my
dressing room and said, 'Come on kid, you're going to come to the
Paramount and sing with me.' But first he told me he didn't care for my
stage name (Joe Bari) and asked me what my real name was. I told him,
'My name is Anthony Dominick Benedetto,' and he said, 'We'll call you
Tony Bennett.' And that's how it happened. A new Americanized name,
the start of a wonderful career and a glorious adventure that has
continued for fifty years.”

With over 50 million records sold world-wide and platinum and gold
albums to his credit, Bennett has received thirteen Grammy Awards and
the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. The MTV generation first took
Tony Bennett to heart during his appearance with the Red Hot Chili
Peppers on the 1993 MTV Video Awards ceremony. He appeared on
“MTV Unplugged” and the resulting recording of the same name
garnered the singer Grammy's top award, “Album of the Year.” “Tony
Bennett has not just bridged the generation gap,” pointed out The New
York Times, “he has demolished it. He has solidly connected with a
younger crowd weaned on rock. And there have been no compromises.”
Bennett credits his son and manager, Danny, for his success in
capturing a whole new generation of listeners.

His initial successes came via a string of Columbia singles in the early
1950's, including such chart-toppers as “Because of You,” “Rags To
Riches” and a remake of Hank Williams' “Cold, Cold Heart.” He had 24
songs in the Top 40, including “I Wanna Be Around,” “The Good Life,”
“Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)” and his signature song,
“I Left My Heart In San Francisco,” which garnered him two Grammy
Awards. Tony Bennett is one of a handful of artists to have new albums
charting in the 50's, 60's, 70's, 80's, 90's and beyond. He introduced a
multitude of songs into the Great American Songbook that have since
become standards for pop music. He has toured the world to sold out
audiences with rave reviews whenever he performs. Bennett re-signed
with Columbia Records in 1986 and released the critically acclaimed
The Art Of Excellence. Since his 1991 show-stopping performance at
the Grammy Awards of “When Do The Bells Ring For Me,” from his
Astoria album, he has received a string of Grammy Awards for releases
including Steppin' Out, Perfectly Frank, and MTV Unplugged. In
celebration of his unparalleled contributions to popular music with
worldwide record sales of over 30 million, Columbia/Legacy assembled
Forty Years:

The Artistry Of Tony Bennett. The four-CD boxed set, released in 1991,
chronicles the singer's stellar recording career and documents his
growth as an artist inspiring Time magazine to call the collection “… the
essence of why CD boxed sets are a blessing.”

Tony Bennett became a Kennedy Center Honoree in 2005, was named
an NEA Jazz Master in January of 2006, and has just been named this
year's recipient of Billboard Magazine's prestigious Century Award, in
honor of his outstanding contributions to music.

Tony Bennett has also received an Emmy Award and a Cable Ace
Award for his ground breaking television special, “Live By Request...
Tony Bennett” which featured a unique interactive format in which the
viewing audience called in song requests to the performer live during
the program, a concept created by Bennett that has become a regular
special on the A&E network. Bennett has also authored two books,
What My Heart Has Seen, a beautifully bound edition of his paintings
published in 1996, and The Good Life, his heartfelt autobiography
released in 1998. He won his thirteenth Grammy Award in 2006 for The
Art of Romance.

Tony Bennett is a dedicated painter whose interest in art began as a
child. He continues to paint every day, even while touring internationally.
He has exhibited his work in galleries around the world and he was
chosen to be the official artist of the 2001 Kentucky Derby and created
two original paintings celebrating this historic event. The United Nations
has commissioned him for two paintings, including one for their 50th
anniversary. His original painting “Homage to Hockney” is on permanent
display at the Butler Institute of American Art and the landmark National
Arts Club in New York is home to his painting, “Boy on Sailboat, Sydney
Bay.” Most recently his oil painting, entitled, “Central Park,” was
accepted to the Smithsonian’s American Art Museum’s permanent
collection in Washington, DC.

Throughout his career, Tony Bennett has always put his heart and time
into humanitarian concerns. He has raised millions of dollars for the
Juvenile Diabetes Foundation which established a research fund in his
name. His original paintings each year grace the cover of the American
Cancer Society's annual holiday greeting card, proceeds from which are
earmarked for cancer research. He is active in environmental concerns
and has performed at fundraisers for both the Walden Woods
Foundation and the Save the Rainforest Foundation. The Martin Luther
King Center in Atlanta bestowed upon him their “Salute to Greatness
Award” for his efforts to fight discrimination. He conceived and
spearheaded the effort to honor his great friend with the establishment
of the Frank Sinatra School of the Arts which opened its doors as a New
York City public high school offering an extensive arts curriculum in
September of 2001.

In the 1950's, thousands of screaming bobby-soxers surrounded the
Paramount Theatre in New York, held back only by police barricades, to
see their singing idol Tony Bennett. Today the children and
grandchildren of those fans are enjoying the same experience. Perhaps
what sums up Tony's legacy and longevity best was the observation
The New York Times made in a review of “MTV Unplugged”: “What
accounts for the Bennett magic? Artistry certainly. The repertory is
indeed classic…. But perhaps more important is his ability to convey a
sense of joy, of utter satisfaction, in what he is doing.”

Tony Bennett turned 81 on August 3, 2007, an event which has
generated a wide range of tributes and celebrations. In addition to the
release of Duets - An American Classic, RPM Records/Columbia
Records/Legacy Recordings is launching a monumental and definitive
reissue project, The Tony Bennett Master Series. Executive produced
by Tony Bennett and Danny Bennett, the first five releases in The Tony
Bennett Master Series include expanded editions of three Grammy
winning titles -- I Left My Heart In San Francisco (1962), Perfectly Frank
(1992), and MTV Unplugged (1994) -- as well as two brand-new 16-
song collections: Tony Bennett's Greatest Hits of the '50s and Tony
Bennett's Greatest Hits of the '60s.

Tony is the subject of a major television special, “Tony Bennett: An
American Classic,” set to air on NBC television in November, 2006.
Conceived and directed by Rob Marshall, executive produced by Danny
Bennett, John DeLuca and Rob Marshall, produced by Jodi Hurwitz,
“Tony Bennett: An American Classic” will feature musical guests Elton
John, Michael Bublé, John Legend, k.d. lang, Diana Krall, Christina
Aguilera, Stevie Wonder, Barbra Streisand, Chris Botti, and Juanes.
Segment hosts for the program include Robert DeNiro, Bruce Willis, Billy
Crystal. John Travolta and Catherine Zeta-Jones.

Notables from the worlds of music, stage, screen and politics were on-
hand to help Tony celebrate his 80th birthday at a star-studded party at
the Museum of Natural History in New York. The evening included
heartfelt tributes from Harry Belafonte, Bruce Willis, Katie Couric and
former President Bill Clinton. '"As you know, I've always admired your
singing and your ability to bring millions of people together across the
generations through your music,” said Clinton, who sent along taped
greetings when he was unable to personally attend Bennett's birthday
festivity due to a prior commitment.

“But you haven't stopped at your musical success. You've spent so
much time working to bring people together through public service. I'll
never forget your special performance at my First Inaugural, and I can't
thank you enough for the support of the Clinton Global Initiative, even
auctioning off one of your beautiful paintings for an enormous amount
of money that will help to keep children around the world alive. I've
valued our friendship so much over the years.

“You're still young, your ear is still pitch-perfect, you've got a light in
your eye, and I hope this special day is just the beginning of many,
many more happy birthdays to a very good man.”

“Everything's all happening at once,” said Bennett. “It's the biggest
amount of recognition I've ever received almost like a payoff for all the
years of traveling on the road.” As the world's most boyish
octogenarian, a vital musical artist at the peak of his powers, Tony
Bennett is living proof that fairy tales can indeed come true when you're
young at heart. Born August 3, 1926
Many of the songs on Duets - An
American Classic were first introduced to
the public by Tony Bennett. In fact, Tony
had experienced some chart success
with his 1967 version of “For Once In My
Life” more than a year before Stevie
Wonder made it one of his signature
songs. Tony and Stevie perform it
together on Duets - An American Classic.
“Ron Miller a very nice guy-composed it,”
Bennett recalls.
“I was at a supper club in
Detroit The Roostertail
and Ron said, 'I
have a song you might like.' I heard it
and said that I'd love to record it and he
was thrilled. Then Stevie, who was still
very young, put a beat behind it when
Motown was coming into its own and he
sold millions. So this is such a wonderful
thing that we both recorded it together.
Stevie slipped in three notes of 'I Left My
Heart in San Francisco' into his
harmonica solo and we all got a laugh. I
consider Stevie Wonder one of the great
jazz artists of all time--and such a
thoughtful, beautiful human being.”
(Tony and Stevie worked together on
“Everyday (I Have The Blues),” a track
on Bennett's 2002 Grammy-winning
album Playin' with My Friends: Bennett
Sings the Blues”.)