Steppin' Out: Astaire Sings

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
In 1952 Fred Astaire joined Oscar Peterson and some of Verve's best sidemen to lay down jazzy, laid-back versions of songs he had made famous in his Broadway and film career. Those 38 tracks, released as The Astaire Story, have been condensed into this collection, Steppin' Out: Fred Astaire Sings. While Astaire was not blessed with great vocal chops, the best American songwriters including George and Ira Gershwin, Irving Berlin, and Cole Porter loved him for his unerring sense of rhythm and sympathetic treatment of lyrics, qualities that are well displayed here. Tony Bennett hit the pop mainstream with his 1994 album of jazzy Astaire standards. Here's the original. --David Horiuchi

Steppin' Out: Astaire Sings, Music, Fred Astaire, Dancer, Jazz Music, Nostalgia, Pop, Pop Vocals, Show Tunes, Showtunes / B'way, Standards, Traditional Pop
Steppin' Out: Astaire Sings
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Fred and Oscar
  • Dancer AND Singer
  • Fresh
  • A Bridge Between the 1930's and 1950's
  • A brilliant collaboration
Steppin' Out: Astaire Sings
Fred Astaire
Manufacturer: Polygram Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
Traditional Jazz GeneralTraditional Jazz General | Traditional Jazz & Ragtime | Jazz | Styles | Music
NostalgiaNostalgia | Miscellaneous | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Musicals | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
Traditional Vocal PopTraditional Vocal Pop | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Broadway & Vocalists | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Oldies | Pop | Styles | Music
Traditional PopTraditional Pop | Oldies | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Easy Listening | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Vocal Pop | Pop | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. The Essential Fred Astaire
  2. Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers At RKO: Motion Picture Soundtrack Anthology
  3. Oscar Peterson & Fred Astaire: Complete Norman Granz Sessions
  4. Fred Astaire's Finest Hour
  5. The Irving Berlin Songbook

ASIN: B0000046V0
Release Date: 1994-06-21

Tracks:

  1. Steppin` Out With My Baby
  2. Let`s Call The Whole Thing Off
  3. Top Hat, White Tie, And Tails
  4. They Can`t Take That Away From Me
  5. Dancing In The Dark
  6. `S Wonderful
  7. The Way You Look Tonight
  8. They All Laughed
  9. I Concentrate On You
  10. Night And Day
  11. A Fine Romance
  12. Nice Work If You Can Get It
  13. The Continental
  14. I Won`t Dance
  15. You`re Easy To Dance With
  16. Change Partners
  17. Cheek To Cheek

Amazon.com

In 1952 Fred Astaire joined Oscar Peterson and some of Verve's best sidemen to lay down jazzy, laid-back versions of songs he had made famous in his Broadway and film career. Those 38 tracks, released as The Astaire Story, have been condensed into this collection, Steppin' Out: Fred Astaire Sings. While Astaire was not blessed with great vocal chops, the best American songwriters including George and Ira Gershwin, Irving Berlin, and Cole Porter loved him for his unerring sense of rhythm and sympathetic treatment of lyrics, qualities that are well displayed here. Tony Bennett hit the pop mainstream with his 1994 album of jazzy Astaire standards. Here's the original. --David Horiuchi

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Fred and Oscar.......2007-06-27

This disc gives a good sample of the 4 LP set called "The Fred Astaire Story". Fred is in fine fettle with the small group of Jazz at the Philharmonic musicians, and the recording is of such quality that you can really hear his style. Also, Oscar Peterson's accompaniment gives the lie to those who say that he plays too many notes or that he doesn't swing. All is understated, in aid of putting Fred into the best light. Of course, you have a selection of some of the great popular songs associated with Fred's career.

5 out of 5 stars Dancer AND Singer.......2006-11-12

Beyond the nostalgia of an eighty year old, "Steppin' Out: Astaire Sings" teamed with some of the great jazz players reveals a fine, gentle singer whose dancing overshadowed his singing in the original movies.

5 out of 5 stars Fresh.......2006-09-05

For something recorded in 1952, this is some of the freshest music today. These songs from stage and movies are given new life by putting show tunes to the take-your-time, more sensitive, less hackneyed rhythms of jazz. Lacking the necessity to carry a movie, Astaire's phrasing and intonations have a very different quality than the original versions.

A certain subtlety comes through and the lyrics are freed from sentimentality, as Astaire masterfully burnishes a deeper and more heartfelt thoughtfulness. "Steppin' Out With My Baby" and "I Won't Dance" have a simpler, carefree quality, and the accompaniement by greats such as Oscar Peterson on piano and Charlie Shavers, Flip Phillips, Barney Kessel, Ray Brown and Alvin Stoller are first rate. This is a must have for not only Fred Astaire afficionados, but also for anyone who really wants to hear how to take an old hit, change it around and come out with something totally fresh.

Fans will like his interview on the final track, "Cheek to Cheek." As it says in the cover note, Tony Bennett proclaimed Fred Astaire our national treasure. Fred Astaire's versatility and willingness to risk putting these standards to a new rhythm should stand as both proof and inspiration.

5 out of 5 stars A Bridge Between the 1930's and 1950's.......2005-09-09

The Great American Song Book reached its highest point in the 1950's with Verve's Jazz recordings of the classic American music of the 1930's. All the Jazz greats stepped back twenty years and breathed new life into the works of Irving Berlin, Rogers and Hart and Cole Porter.

"Steppin' Out" is brilliant because it serves as a link between the Broadway and Hollywood Music of the 1930's and the new Jazz interpretations of the 1950's. Many of the songs covered in this album were written for and first performed by Fred Astaire.

Verve had a first rate idea in asking Fred Astaire to work with Oscar Peterson. The arrangements show all the brilliance that Peterson was capable of achieving and Astaire stepped up to the musical challange. The jazz pace and phrasing worked perfectly for Astaire. His voice and delivery had only improved with time. In my opinion, his voice in the 1930's had a tinny quality to it. But by the 1950's he had matured and there is deepness to his voice that works well in a jazz setting.

There can be little argument that Fred Astaire was one of the great dancers of the Twentieth Century. Although not as well respected as a vocalist, this album quite clearly shows that Astaire could do it all.

5 out of 5 stars A brilliant collaboration.......2004-11-07

If you like Astaire, Jazz or the American songbook you will love this. The understated virtuoso arrangements let the songs shine and Astaire is the real thing.

Music:

  1. Sunset Boulevard (1994 Los Angeles Cast) [Cast Recording]
  2. Surrender [Import]
  3. Sweet Charity: A New Musical Comedy (1966 Original Broadway Cast) [Cast Recording]
  4. Swings Cole Porter
  5. The Best of Broadway
  6. The Full Monty: The Broadway Musical [Cast Recording]
  7. The King and I (Original 1951 Broadway Cast) [Cast Recording] [Original recording remastered] [Cast Recording]
  8. The Musicality of Strouse
  9. The New Moon (2003 Encores! Revival Concert Cast) [Soundtrack]
  10. The Pajama Game (1954 Original Broadway Cast) [Cast Recording] [Extra tracks] [Original recording remastered]

Music

Music