Sweet and Sentimental explained

Sweet and Sentimental
Type:studio
Artist:Jan Howard with The Jordanaires
Cover:Sweet and Sentimental.jpg
Released:October 1962
Label:Capitol
Producer:Ken Nelson
Prev Title:Sweethearts of Country Music
Prev Year:1960
Next Title:Jan Howard Sings Evil on Your Mind
Next Year:1966

Sweet and Sentimental is the debut studio album by American country artist Jan Howard. Credit was also given to the album's backing group The Jordanaires. It was released by Capitol Records in October 1962 and consisted of 12 tracks. The album was originally meant to be issued on Howard's former record label until it was bought by Capitol. After several setbacks recording the album, the project was finished under the production of Ken Nelson. It received a positive response from Billboard magazine following its release.

Background

The wife of country songwriter Harlan Howard, Jan Howard was given the opportunity to become a recording artist with her husband's insistence. At Challenge Records, her first singles were issued, including the top 20 song "The One You Slip Around With" (1960). According to Howard, a studio album of material was intended to be released through Challenge. This plan was delayed after Harlan and producer Joe Johnson allowed Capitol Records to buy out her Challenge contract without her permission. After a court battle and Harlan's insistence, Howard ultimately agreed to her contractual obligations. Ultimately, her first studio album would be recorded and released with the Capitol label.

Recording and content

Howard then flew to Los Angeles, California to record her first Capitol album. The original producer set to record the album was "drunk" and had found "lousy" songs, according to Howard. She instead insisted on Ken Nelson producing her first album, which he ultimately agreed to. Nelson then brought in The Jordanaires quartet sing background vocals on the album.[1] Capitol's "foreign product" executive believed Howard to be a pop artist (rather than the country music she was doing) and encouraged Nelson to find pop material to record.

Upon walking into her first recording session, Howard was shocked when she discovered that Nelson had brought in a string section and removed the country instrumentation she was used to. Howard then walked out of the session after she found some of the session musicians to be rude and off-putting. Angry that his wife walked out of the session, Harlan Howard encouraged his wife to finish the session and the album was ultimately recorded under Nelson's production. Sweet and Sentimental was a collection of 12 tracks,[1] most of which were cover tunes. Among them were Doris Day's "Everybody Loves a Lover", Guy Mitchell/Ray Price's "Heartaches by the Number" and Willie Nelson's "Funny How Time Slips Away". Six of the songs were penned by Harlan Howard.[1] One new recording, "This Sad Old House", was co-written with Carlos Minor and it was his first cut on an album.[2]

Release, critical reception and singles

Sweet and Sentimental was released by Capitol Records in October 1962. It was distributed as a vinyl LP, with six songs on either side of the record. The album was offered in both mono and stereo formats. The Jordanaires were given equal credit on the album's release.[1] The album was re-issued with only ten tracks by Tower Records in 1967 under the title Lonely Country.[3] Sweet and Sentimental was then released to digital formats in 2013 through Marmot Music.[4] It was given positive reception by Billboard magazine, which gave it four stars. "Gal has a sincere, pleasing style and she's at home with all These tunes. Each one gets the Nashville vocal and combo backing," the publication concluded. Howard's cover of "Looking Back" was then released as a single by Capitol in November 1962.[5]

Technical personnel

All credits are adapted from the liner notes of Sweet and Sentimental.[1]

Release history

RegionDateFormatLabelRef.
North AmericaAugust 1962VinylCapitol Records
January 7, 2013Marmot Music

References

Books

Notes and References

  1. Howard . Jan . Sweet and Sentimental (Liner Notes) . . October 1962 . T-1779 (Mono); ST-1779 (Stereo).
  2. Folk Talent & Tunes . . November 10, 1962 . 40 . 9 January 2023.
  3. Howard . Jan . Lonely Country (Liner Notes) . . 1967 . T-5068 (Mono); ST-5068 (Stereo).
  4. Web site: Sweet and Sentimental . . 9 January 2023.
  5. Howard . Jan . "Looking Back"/"See One Broken Heart (You've Seen Them All)" (7" vinyl single) . . November 1962 . 4869.