In Person!

{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2025}}

{{Infobox album

| name = In Person!

| type = studio

| artist = Tony Bennett with the Count Basie Orchestra

| cover = inperson!.jpg

| alt =

| released = March 1959{{cite magazine |date=March 23, 1959 |title=The Billboard Spotlight Winners of the Week |magazine=Billboard |publisher=Nielsen Business Media, Inc. |pages=33 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QSAEAAAAMBAJ&dq=bennett+In+Person+1294&pg=PA33 |via=Google Books}}

| recorded = December 22 & 30, 1958

| venue =

| studio = CBS 30th Street (New York City)

| genre = Jazz

| length = 33:55

| label = Columbia
CL 1294
CS 8104

| producer = Al Ham

| chronology = Tony Bennett

| prev_title = Long Ago and Far Away

| prev_year = 1958

| next_title = Strike Up the Band

| next_year = 1959

| misc = {{Extra chronology

| artist = Count Basie Orchestra

| type = album

| prev_title = Breakfast Dance and Barbecue

| prev_year = 1959

| title = In Person!

| year = 1959

| next_title = Strike Up the Band

| next_year = 1959

}}

}}

In Person! is a 1959 album by Tony Bennett, accompanied by the Count Basie Orchestra.{{AllMusic|class=album|id=in-person!-mobile-fidelity-mw0000672189|label=In Person!}}

The album was originally intended to be a live recording of a November 1958 performance at Philadelphia's Latin Casino, but the mono recording of the concert was disregarded by producer Al Ham who wanted the album recorded in stereo. Bennett and Basie were then reunited in the studio a month later to recreate the live concert. Fake applause was dubbed onto the original release of In Person! by Ham, and placed in incorrect places on the album. The effect was poorly received and removed for the album's 1994 re-issue.{{cite book|author=David Evanier|title=All the Things You Are: The Life of Tony Bennett|url=https://archive.org/details/allthingsyouarel00evan_0|url-access=registration|date=30 June 2011|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|isbn=978-1-118-03354-8|pages=[https://archive.org/details/allthingsyouarel00evan_0/page/118 118]–}} In his autobiography, The Good Life, Bennett wrote that "I never understood why we didn't release the live version. The whole attempt at fabricating an audience was in bad taste" and that as a result of the experience he had always preferred the second album he recorded with Basie that year, Strike Up the Band.{{cite book|author=Tony Bennett|title=The Good Life: The Autobiography of Tony Bennett|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cSP5j52VaUsC&pg=PT144|date=7 December 2010|publisher=Simon and Schuster|isbn=978-1-4516-3499-0|pages=144–}}

Basie and Bennett recorded two albums together in 1959; In Person! was released by Bennett's record label, Columbia, and Strike Up the Band was released by Basie's label, Roulette.

On November 8, 2011, Sony Music Distribution included the CD in a box set entitled The Complete Collection.{{cite web |title=The Complete Collection - Tony Bennett |url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-complete-collection-mw0002217006 |access-date=8 October 2024 |work=allmusic.com |publisher=}}

Reception

{{music ratings

| rev1 = Allmusic

| rev1score = {{Rating|3.5|5}}{{AllMusic|class=album|id=in-person!-mobile-fidelity-mw0000672189}}

| rev2 = Record Mirror

| rev2score = {{Rating|4|5}}

| rev3 = The Encyclopedia of Popular Music

| rev3score = {{rating|3|5}}{{cite book |last1=Larkin |first1=Colin |title=The Encyclopedia of Popular Music |date=2007 |publisher=Omnibus Press |page=148 |isbn=9781846098567 |url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofpo0000unse_v3u2/page/148/mode/2up |accessdate=2 November 2024}}

}}

Billboard magazine chose In Person! as one of their "Spotlight Winners of the Week" in March 1959, and wrote that "The drive of the Bennett vocals is excellently paced by the swingin' Basie crew. Tunes are nicely paced and varied. It's an exciting set that builds track after track".{{cite magazine |magazine=Billboard |title=The Billboard Spotlight Winners of the Week: Pop Albums |url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_KCAEAAAAMBAJ |date=23 March 1959 |publisher=Nielsen Business Media, Inc. |page=33 |issn=0006-2510}}

In sharp contast, Ralph J. Gleason in the July 1959 edition of HiFi Review called the record "disappointing" and opined that it "brings out all the faults of Bennett," that "Tony Bennett really can't sing well enough to earn the support of a band like this" and that the performance suffered from "poor intonation, poor phrasing and great determination to be dramatic."{{cite magazine |last=Gleason |first=Ralph J. |date=July 1959 |title=Mono Entertainment |magazine=HiFi/Stereo Review |pages=75 |url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Audio/Archive-HiFI-Stereo/50s/HiFi-Stereo-Review-1959-07.pdf}}

Record Mirror mentions the album "features an exciting and clever selection of songs"{{Cite magazine |date=April 1, 1967 |title=Best of bargain albums this month from 2 girls Joan Baez And Connie Franics |url=https://www.worldradiohistory.com/UK/Record-Mirror/60s/67/Record-Mirror-1967-04-01.pdf |magazine=Record Mirror |pages=8 |language=en |issue=316}}

Bruce Eder positively reviewed the 1994 re-issue of In Person! for Allmusic, and wrote that "Bennett's sensitively nuanced intonation in the opening of "Pennies from Heaven" is now up close and personal, while the band's beat in the second half of the song is now crisper and more solid than ever. Ralph Sharon, Bennett's usual accompanist, is handling the piano chores (while Basie himself is credited as leader), and his finely articulated playing is also brought out crisply on "Lost in the Stars" and other tracks. It's all worth hearing, and more often than just once—it was records like this, as reconstituted properly for CD, that constituted the absolute golden end of the pop legacy of the late '50s."

Track listing

Personnel

The Count Basie Orchestra:

Other credits

  • Al Hamproducer
  • Didier C. Deutsch – associate producer
  • Al Ham – associate producer
  • Frank Laico – engineer
  • Cliff Morris – engineer
  • Seymour Mednick – photography
  • Kevin Boutote – mastering
  • Bob Burns – contractor

References