The Best Is Yet to Come (Ella Fitzgerald album) explained

The Best Is Yet to Come
Type:studio
Artist:Ella Fitzgerald
Cover:TheBestIsYettoCome.jpg
Released:1982
Recorded:February 4, 5, 1982
Genre:Jazz
Length:40:11
Label:Pablo Today
Producer:Norman Granz
Prev Title:Ella Abraça Jobim
Prev Year:1981
Next Title:Speak Love
Next Year:1983

The Best Is Yet to Come is a 1982 studio album by the American jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald, accompanied by a studio orchestra arranged and conducted by Nelson Riddle.

The last of Fitzgerald's six collaborations with Riddle, their work together on the Verve label more than fifteen years earlier is considered some of Fitzgerald's finest, both musically and critically.

Fitzgerald's performance on the album won her the 1984 Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Performance, Female, one of three Grammys she won for her work with Riddle.

Reception

In his biography of Riddle, September In the Rain, Peter J. Levinson wrote that the album "...simply wasn't the best. In fact it was a near disaster. The raggedy tone of Ella's voice couldn't be disguised".[1]

Track listing

  1. "Don't Be That Way" (Benny Goodman, Mitchell Parish, Edgar Sampson) – 4:03
  2. "God Bless the Child" (Arthur Herzog Jr., Billie Holiday) – 4:42
  3. "(I Wonder) Where Our Love Has Gone" (Buddy Johnson) – 3:48
  4. "You're Driving Me Crazy" (Walter Donaldson) – 3:27
  5. "Any Old Time" (Artie Shaw) – 4:19
  6. "Goodbye" (Gordon Jenkins) – 3:58
  7. "Autumn in New York" (Vernon Duke) – 3:24
  8. "The Best Is Yet to Come" (Cy Coleman, Carolyn Leigh) – 5:19
  9. "Deep Purple" (Peter DeRose, Parish) – 4:04
  10. "Somewhere in the Night" (Milton Raskin, Billy May) – 3:07

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Book: Peter J. Levinson. September in the Rain: The Life of Nelson Riddle. 1 January 2005. Taylor Trade Publications. 978-1-58979-163-3. 265.