Sing a Song with Riddle explained

Sing a Song with Riddle
Type:album
Artist:Nelson Riddle
Cover:Nelson_Riddle_-_Sing_a_Song_with_Riddle.jpg
Released:1959
Recorded:1959
Genre:Traditional pop
Length:29:18
Label:Capitol TAO-1259
Chronology:Nelson Riddle
Prev Title:The Joy of Living (album)
Prev Year:1959
Next Title:Music of the Motion Picture "Can Can"
Next Year:1960

Sing a Song with Riddle is the seventh studio album by American composer and arranger Nelson Riddle, released in 1959.[1] The album consists of arrangements for a vocalist but without a singer; a lyric sheet was supplied with the original album package for buyers to sing along with at home.[2] The inspiration for the release was a series of albums for amateur instrumentalists called Music Minus One on Command Records.[3]

Reception

Reviewing the album for AllMusic, William Ruhlmann writes:

As mere listening experiences, many of these tracks are not actually recognized as the songs listed on the LP jacket, but no doubt they would be if Sinatra was singing over them. Sometimes, Riddle uses a bit of the melody, but much of the time, this remains background music that needs to be completed by someone else. It's a clever gimmick and a bit of joke, and it shows how far Riddle's treatments can stray from the lead sheets on occasion.

Ruhlmann concludes that "unless the buyer is standing by with the sheet music ready and a good voice to add on top", the album is an "incomplete experience".

Track listing

Side 2

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nelson Riddle - Sing a Song with Riddle at Discogs. discogs.com. 20 March 2020.
  2. Book: Colin Larkin. The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. 27 May 2011. Omnibus Press. 978-0-85712-595-8. 23.
  3. Book: Peter J. Levinson. September in the Rain: The Life of Nelson Riddle. 2005. Taylor Trade Publications. 978-1-58979-163-3. 188.