!bool(false) !
Advanced search
Artist
2024 0-9 z y x w v u t s r q p o n m l k j i h g f e d c b a

Freddie Scott - Everything I Have Is Yours '1964

Everything I Have Is Yours
ArtistFreddie Scott Related artists
Album name Everything I Have Is Yours
Country
Date 1964
GenreSoul
Play time 32:56
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 195 MB
PriceDownload $1.95
Order this album and it will be available for purchase and further download within 12 hours
Pre-order album

Tracks list

Tracklist:

1. Secret Love (02:53)
2. There Goes My Heart (02:59)
3. Everything I Have Is Yours (02:22)
4. I'm in the Mood for Love (03:41)
5. As Time Goes By (03:46)
6. Out of Nowhere (02:07)
7. That Old Black Magic (02:32)
8. Again (02:53)
9. The Second Time Around (02:43)
10. Laura (02:23)
11. Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing (02:07)
12. I'll Never Stop Loving You (02:24)


 moreThe record earned little attention, but Johnnie & Joe scored soon after
with the Scott-penned "I'll Be Spinning." However, in late 1956 he was called up
for military duty, briefly serving in Korea. But Scott's service stint did not
completely curtail his recording career, and for the tiny Bow and Arrow label he
cut 1957's "Tell Them for Me," followed a year later by "Please Call" and "A
Faded Memory." After completing his military stint, Scott landed with the
short-lived Enrica label for 1959's "Come On, Honey," and when it met the same
indifference that greeted his previous records he focused on songwriting,
teaming with Helen Miller to compose for Al Nevins and Don Kirshner's Brill
Building firm Aldon Music.

Scott sang on many of his Aldon demos and worked briefly as a producer, helming
sessions for Aretha Franklin's sister Erma. In 1961, he also resumed his
recording career, cutting "Baby, You're a Long Time Dead" for the Joy label. In
1962, fellow Aldon songwriters Gerry Goffin and Carole King approached him for
assistance with "Hey Girl," a new tune they hoped to pitch to soul singer Chuck
Jackson. When Jackson proved unable to make the scheduled recording session,
Scott cut the vocal instead, and when Colpix Records finally issued the ballad a
year later, he entered the Top Ten on both the pop and R&B charts. A
slow-burning rendition of Ray Charles' R&B classic "I Got a Woman" followed,
affirming Scott as a deep soul singer of uncommon depth (even if efforts like
his third Colpix entry, "Where Does Love Go," suffered from sugary
over-production).

Diminishing commercial returns combined with Colpix's crumbling infrastructure
to relocate Scott to parent label Columbia, which dubbed him "the Million Dollar
Baby" and recast him as a crooner with 1964's "One Heartache Too Many." In 1965,
he even released Everything I Have Is Yours, a cabaret-inspired LP comprised
largely of hit movie themes. The makeover fell flat, and Scott returned to a
more traditional soul dynamic with the excellent Lonely Man. Record sales were
virtually nonexistent, however, and after two last-gasp Columbia singles --
including the poignant ballad "Don't Let It End This Way" -- the label let him
go.

Scott resurfaced in 1966 at Shout Records, the fledgling soul label founded by
producer/songwriter Bert Berns -- together they co-wrote "Are You Lonely for
Me," a simmering, bluesy knockout that reportedly required over 100 vocal takes
prior to completion. Scott's Herculean effort was rewarded with a record that
topped the R&B charts for four weeks while rising to number 39 on the pop
charts. The 1967 follow-up, "Cry to Me," proved a commercial disappointment, but
Scott's impassioned, tender performance represents his creative apex. He
returned to the R&B Top Ten with the funky "Am I Grooving You?," and while "Just
Like a Flower" missed the charts entirely, 1968's "(You) Got What I Need" earned
a spot in the R&B Top 40 as well as an eccentric cover by rapper Biz Markie some
20 years later.

But after Berns died of a massive heart attack on December 31, 1967, his widow,
Eileen, proved unable to keep Shout Records afloat, and following one last Shout
single, "No One Could Ever Love You," Scott left the label, spending the next
two years without a record deal. He finally landed with the short-lived Elephant
V, issuing "Sugar on Sunday" in 1970. After cutting a follow-up, "I'll Be
Leaving Her Tomorrow," he again packed his bags, moving to ABC's Probe imprint
for I Shall Be Released, scoring his final R&B Top 40 entry with the title cut,
a powerful rendition of the Bob Dylan perennial.

When Probe folded, Scott was again seeking a place to record, signing to
Vanguard for the one-off 1971 single "I Guess God Wants It That Way." Pickwick
International released 1972's "The Great If," and two years later Scott
resurfaced on Mainstream with the ballad "You Are So Hard to Forget," which
proved his final single. By now he made his living primarily through writing
advertising jingles with longtime composing partner Miller, and also turned to
acting, appearing in the films Stiletto and No Way Out.

Scott also maintained a busy live schedule well into the 1980s before spending
the following decade in virtual hibernation. He returned to music after agreeing
to record a version of Van Morrison's "Brown Eyed Girl" for an Evangeline
Records tribute album -- the project introduced Scott to producer Jon Tiven, and
together they hatched plans to record a blues LP, in 2001 releasing Brand New
Man, his first new material in close to a quarter century. Scott passed away on
June 4, 2007. © Jason Ankeny



Freddie Scott - Everything I Have Is Yours.rar - 195.5 MB

Freddie Scott


Album