Buy at Amazon:Â Bette Midler
Bette Midler is the eponymous second studio album by American female vocalist Bette Midler, released in 1973 on the Atlantic Records label.
The album, produced by Arif Mardin and Barry Manilow, includes Midler‘s interpretations of Johnny Mercer and Hoagy Carmichael‘s “Skylark”, Berthold Brecht and Kurt Weill‘s “Surabaya Johnny”, Bob Dylan‘s “I Shall Be Released” and Glenn Miller‘s “In the Mood” as well as a Phil Spector medley.
Bette Midler reached #6 on the US albums chart and was later awarded a Gold Disc by the RIAA.
The album was digitally remastered and reissued on CD by Atlantic Records/Warner Music in 1995 but with no bonus tracks.
Side A
- “Skylark” (Hoagy Carmichael, Johnny Mercer) – 3:02
- “Drinking Again” (Johnny Mercer, Doris Tauber) – 2:48
- “Breaking Up Somebody’s Home” (Al Jackson Jr., Timothy Matthews) – 3:49
- “Surabaya Johnny” (Bertolt Brecht, Herbert Hartig, Kurt Weill) – 4:54
- “I Shall Be Released” (Bob Dylan) – 4:56
Side B
- “Optimistic Voices“/”Lullaby of Broadway” (Arlen, Al Dubin, Feist, E.Y. Harburg, Herbert Stothart, Harry Warren) – 2:27
- “In the Mood” (Joe Garland, Andy Razaf) – 2:39
- “Uptown”/”Don’t Say Nothin’ Bad (About My Baby)“/”Da Doo Ron Ron” (Jeff Barry, Gerry Goffin, Ellie Greenwich, Carole King, Mann, Mother Bertha, Phil Spector, Weil) – 3:23
- “Twisted” (Wardell Gray, Annie Ross) – 2:25
- “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher” (Chevis, Gary Jackson, Raynard Miner, Carl Smith) – 4:06
Personnel
- Bette Midler -Â lead vocals
- Barry Manilow - piano, percussion, backing vocals, musical arranger, musical conductor
- Ken Ascher - keyboards
- Pat Rebillot – keyboards
- Don Grolnick – keyboards
- David Spinozza - guitars
- Cornell Dupree – guitars
- Frank Vento – guitars
- Hugh McCracken – guitars
- Stu Woods -Â bass guitars
- Chuck Rainey – bass guitar
- Bill Salter – bass guitar
- Milt Hinton – bass guitar
- Will Lee – bass guitar
- Rick Marotta - drums
- Grady Tate – drums
- Bernard Purdie – drums
- Steve Gadd – drums
- Luther Rix – drums, percussion
- Ralph MacDonald – percussion
- Arif Mardin – percussion
- Kenneth Bichel -Â synthesizers
- Gene Orloff -Â concert master
- Gale Kantor – background vocals
- Merle Miller – background vocals
- Sylvia Shemwell – background vocals
- Myrna Smith – background vocals
- Tasha Thomas – background vocals
- Shirley Brewer – background vocals
- Ann S. Clark – background vocals
- Sharon Redd – background vocals
- Robin Grean – background vocals
- Charlotte Crossley – background vocals
Production
- Arif Mardin - producer
- Barry Manilow – producer
- Gene Paul -Â recording engineer
- Lew Hahn – recording engineer
- Jimmy Douglas – recording engineer for additional recordings
- Robbert Warner – recording engineer for additional recordings
- Elliot Sheiner – recording engineer for additional recordings
- Buzz Richmond – recording engineer for additional recordings
- Scott Schreckengosf – recording engineer for additional recordings
- George Piros -Â mastering
- Dennis King – mastering
- Richard Amsel -Â cover art
- Lee Gurst – backliner photo
- Loring Eutemey – album design
- Recorded at Atlantic Recording Studios, New York, N.Y.
- Additional recordings at A & R Studios, New York, N.Y.; Atlantic Recording Studios, New York, N.Y. & Kaye / Smith Studios, Seattle, Washington
- Re-mixed by: Lew Hahn & Arif Mardin
Rolling Stone Magazine (RS 152), Jon Landau
Bette Midler asks the question, what were co-producers Barry Manilow and Arif Mardin thinking about while she was singing “I Shall Be Released”? It’s hard to believe they were listening to Bette for they are too knowledgeable and sophisticated to have approved of any singing so unmusical, so embarrassingly flat, so brazenly insensitive. But if they knew her performance was inadequate, then what was the explanation for Mardin and Lew Hahn’s mixing the vocal so prominently that even the most casual listener will have to notice its shortcomings? Perhaps they were having a joke at her expense. Or, more likely, perhaps she liked her work and no one had the nerve or desire to contradict her eminence. Whatever the reasons, Bette Midler’s recorded performance of “I Shall Be Released” is the single worst performance of a Bob Dylan song I have ever heard.
Unlike The Divine Miss M, Bette Midler contains the artifacts of a style without nuance, content or intelligence. The debut album also contained its share of pure posturing but was held together by a core of performances rendered with an engagingly intense naivete. “Delta Dawn,” “Friends,” “Hello In There,” and her exceptionally original reworking of “Do You Want to Dance” all demanded that she be taken seriously. They also provided a good balance to the rest of the album’s re-creation of her stage act, with its emphasis on oldies and Forties romps.
On Bette Midler, she has dispensed with the serious core of the last album-the new material by young songwriters and the sensitive reworking of contemporary standards-and has simply recorded new additions to, and some leftovers from, her concert act. Onstage, she doesn’t so much sing as she acts. But, in the studio this time around, she barely sings either.
Bette Midler has failed to absorb the first principle of recording: that the studio is not merely an extension of the stage, but an entirely separate arena for a different sort of creation. She could have surmised as much if she had realized that one of her most popular concert numbers, “Leader of the Pack,” was clearly the least effective cut on her debut LP. It did not warrant its current successors: a desecration of “Da Doo Ron Ron” and a horrendous “Higher And Higher,” which contains a series of nonmusical crescendos, devoid of rhythmic sense. Only “Uptown” begins to work and then because, as with “Do You Want to Dance,” she has thoroughly recast it and taken it as seriously as it deserves.
The campy re-creation of Andrews Sisters harmony is fun in concert and was good for a one-shot novelty recording, “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy.” But the song’s commercial success didn’t warrant new recordings of “Lullabye Of Broadway” and “In The Mood.” She has neither the stylishness nor the voice for such comparatively difficult singing and it shows.
On uptempo material she may be able to bull her way through uncritical listeners with her sheer manic energy. But even her most devoted followers will inevitably be confused by the emptiness of her interpretations of things like the beautiful Johnny Mercer ballad “Skylark,” Kurt Weill’s mysteriously foreboding “Surabaya Johnny,” and the standard “Drinking Again.”
The album’s first side has the slow material, the second the uptempo cuts. But the hysterically shrill and often mindless approach to the lyrics is as much in evidence on the bizarrely unintelligible “I Shall Be Released” as on her “Higher And Higher.” Her inability as an interpreter of words is most apparent when she is trying hardest: “Twisted” is her most affected performance, and she makes the song seem a pointless piece of jazz-like nonsense.
Bette Midler clarified the nature of her artistic misconceptions about herself, for me, at a recent concert in Boston. She surely has the talent to become a Seventies extension of musical – comedy entertainment. The question is whether she wants to follow in the footsteps of Barbra Streisand at her best or Judy Garland at her worst. Right now, she has chosen the latter. That approach entails patronizing the audience for the sake of unqualified approval. The method is to invite listeners to become part of a select elite that communicates with each other by virtue of their common appreciation of the Divine Miss M’s imperial qualities. Bette Midler’s music is never an end in itself but always a means for obtaining applause. And in her lust for applause there is nothing so degrading that she won’t use it to get it. What else is one to make of her promise that she and her Harlettes are there to “shake our tits”?
Some have argued that Barbra Streisand’s greatness rests in her ability to make things we once took to be ugly (a brassy Jewish girl from Brooklyn) seem beautiful. But except in their physical aspect, people are only as ugly as they make themselves. And when a performer merely wallows in negative qualities as part of an act, it’s only to ask for (or, in Bette Midler’s case, demand) sympathy, or worse still, pity. To degrade oneself as a means of attracting and establishing rapport with an audience is not only to diminish oneself but to diminish all those who come to enjoy the performance.
Some of Bette Midler’s audience is laughing at her. Some offer a confused sort of approval simply because she works so hard to get it. But worst of all is the applause that comes from people that identify with her own hideous mocking of herself and her willingness to deny her own sexual identity.
I liked The Divine Miss M a great deal, although even then it was clear that her personality had divided between two sensibilities-pop interpreter and Seventies camp queen. There may be some excuse for the latter on a stage, but there isn’t much on a record and, unfortunately, that is what Bette Midler is all about.
In an earlier review, I compared Miss Midler’s potential to Barbra Streisand’s, much to the chagrin of her hard-core admirers. This time I’ll go a step further and suggest that she needs an autocratic musical director as much as her predecessor did. (In fact, she would probably benefit from a collaboration with Streisand’s last good one, Richard Perry, who would be, if nothing else, a substantial improvement over her “maestro,” Barry Manilow.) But as a musical comedy personality, with little innate awareness of her own potential and liabilities, she apparently needs someone-anyone-strong enough to pick material, musicians, sound and style for her.
Bette Midler proves beyond a doubt, she can’t do it with Arif Mardin and Barry Manilow. And she sure as hell can’t do it by herself.
Consumer Guide, Robert Christgau
Side two does seven great songs with umpteen instruments in just over fifteen minutes, a perfectly amazing miracle of concision. But side one is less than hot. Two (why two?) just-wrong Johnny Mercer songs lead into a properly excessive intro to Ann Peebles’s “Breaking Up Somebody’s Home” that is destroyed inside of two minutes by an improperly excessive, funkless production. Bette’s overstatement works on “Surabaya Johnny” and “I Shall Be Released,” but I’ve heard better. Most important, why isn’t there one song by a contemporary composer here? Dylan doesn’t count–I’m talking about Randy Newman, Gilbert O’Sullivan, Joni Mitchell, maybe James Taylor or Cat Stevens, she’s always made me believe in miracles. As it stands, this record is perilously close to the ostrich nostalgia of her dumbest fans. B+
Entertainment Weekly, Jess Cagle
Her second album, which also went gold, established her as the 1970s’ premiere pop diva. She gives a nice, boozy flow to ”Drinking Again” and lets loose with a big-eyed rendition of ”In the Mood.” A