When I'm Alone I Cry: Difference between revisions

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'''''When I'm Alone I Cry''''' is the third [[studio album]] by [[Marvin Gaye]], released in 1964. It was one of several attempts of the singer to make a name for himself as a [[jazz]] vocalist.
 
The album includes ten [[pop music|pop]] and jazz [[standard]]s; at Gaye's request, two of the songs were taken from [[Billie Holiday]]'s album ''[[Lady in Satin]]''. The [[backing track]]s were recorded by [[record producer|producer]] [[Clarence Paul]] in [[New York]] and [[Chicago]], using [[arrangement|arrangers]] [[Jerome Richardson]], [[Melba Liston]], and [[Ernie Wilkins]]. Gaye [[overdub]]bed the vocal tracks after returning to [[Detroit]] from touring.<ref name=ritz>[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=aAJLQW0oRlgC&pg=PA93&dq=%22When+I%27m+Alone+I+Cry%22+gaye&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwipi4S49ILOAhXHJcAKHWgNCLM4ChDoAQgxMAI#v=onepage&q=%22When%20I'm%20Alone%20I%20Cry%22%20gaye&f=false David Ritz, ''Divided Soul: The Life Of Marvin Gaye", Da Capo Press, 2009, p.93]</ref>
After ''When I'm Alone I Cry'' was unsuccessful upon its release, Gaye finally balked under pressure to record more [[rhythm and blues|R&B]] and [[soul music|soul]] material. By the end of the decade, he had become one of the best-selling and most revered soul artists of his generation.
 
Critic [[Richie Unterberger]] describes the album as "competently done, but.. supper-club fare, in which Gaye comes off as a sub-[[Nat King Cole]] rather than his own man."<ref>[http://www.allmusic.com/album/when-im-alone-i-cry-mw0000118514 Review by Richie Unterberger, ''Allmusic.com'']. Retrieved 21 July 2016</ref> Gaye's biographer [[David Ritz]] says: "His ballad style remained self-conscious and restrained... The results were flat, though on the up-tempo numbers he swung effortlessly, demonstrating his natural feel for jazz."<ref name=ritz/> After ''When I'm Alone I Cry'' was unsuccessful upon its release, Gaye finally balked under pressure to record more [[rhythm and blues|R&B]] and [[soul music|soul]] material. By the end of the decade, he had become one of the best-selling and most revered soul artists of his generation.
 
{{Album reviews
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#"When I'm Alone I Cry" ([[Mickey Stevenson|Avery Vandenberg]], [[Morris Broadnax]], Fredericka Foreman) - 2:47
#"If My Heart Could Sing" (Avery Vandenberg, Morris Broadnax) - 3:20
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
 
{{Marvin Gaye}}