Lost and Found: Breaking Through

Lost and Found: Breaking Through

by The Four Tops
Lost and Found: Breaking Through

Lost and Found: Breaking Through

by The Four Tops

Compact Disc

$18.99 
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Overview

The Four Tops' early years as a jazz-vocal group are generally glossed over in capsule histories. Long before they signed to Motown -- nearly a full decade as a matter of fact -- they had been one of the popular Detroit jazz-vocal groups, earning the admiration of such luminaries as Smokey Robinson and Billy Eckstine, whom the group supported. After some persuasion, the group signed with Motown on the condition that they could record jazz. Over the course of a year, they cut nearly two albums' worth of material, which boiled down to one album, Breaking Through. Berry Gordy pulled the record at the last minute, believing that it would have been a commercial failure. Gordy's fears were not unfounded -- indeed, had the album that comprises Breaking Through (1963-1964) been put out in 1964, it likely wouldn't have found much of an audience. Still, Breaking Through is a strong record, firmly within its tradition and working well on those terms. The Four Tops may not sound as distinctive singing jazz as they did with pop-soul, but they are convincing, as are the Motown house band. Neither of them take many chances, however. The songs are primarily standards, plus four new songs that feel like standards, all given good generic arrangements. This may sound like a dismissal, but it isn't; it's hard to do this kind of music right, but the group most certainly does. And it's not just one member that shines; everyone gets to take a lead, and the results are uniformly strong. Even so, Breaking Through appeals primarily to hardcore fans of the group, plus a handful of straight-ahead vocal-jazz aficionados. Reminiscent of a cross between Eckstine and the Four Freshmen, it's good stuff, but it's essentially a curiosity. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Product Details

Release Date: 09/28/1999
Label: Motown
UPC: 0601215336528
Rank: 127826

Tracks

  1. This Can't Be Love
  2. On the Street Where You Live
  3. Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You
  4. Nice 'N' Easy
  5. Maybe Today
  6. Stranger on the Shore
  7. Young and Foolish
  8. Discovered
  9. I Left My Heart in San Francisco
  10. Fascinating Rhythm
  11. The End of a Beautiful Friendship
  12. If My Heart Could Sing
  13. Can't Get You Out of This Mood
  14. When I'm Alone I Cry
  15. Until I Met You
  16. I'm Falling for You
  17. Every Day I Have the Blues/Goin' to Chicago Blues
  18. I Could Have Danced All Night
  19. I'm Falling for You

Album Credits

Performance Credits

The Four Tops   Primary Artist
Billy Eckstine   Primary Artist,Guest Artist,Vocals

Technical Credits

Don Wolf   Composer
George Cory   Composer
Albert Hague   Composer
Alan Bergman   Composer
Bud Green   Composer
Harry Weinger   Producer
William "Mickey" Stevenson   Composer
Jimmy McHugh   Composer
Clarence Williams   Composer
Don Redman   Composer
Douglass Cross   Composer
Richard Rodgers   Composer
Acker Bilk   Composer
Morris Broadnax   Composer
Arnold B. Horwitt   Composer
Theodore Anderson   Composer
William Vanden Burg   Composer
Roger Anderson   Composer
George Sanders   Composer
Stu Hackel   Producer
Stanley Styne   Composer
Donald Kahn   Composer
John Allen   Composer
Arnold Horwitt   Composer
Ron Miller   Composer
Frederick Loewe   Composer
Frank Loesser   Composer
Andy Razaf   Composer
Peter Chatman   Composer
Jule Styne   Composer
Lew Spence   Composer
Robert Mellin   Composer
Alan Jay Lerner   Composer
Freddie Green   Composer
George Gershwin   Composer
Douglas Cross   Composer
Ira Gershwin   Composer
Lorenz Hart   Composer
Marilyn Bergman   Composer
Joe Hubert Trafalgar   Composer
Joe Marles   Composer
Frederika Foreman   Composer
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