Rating:
Genre:
Easy Listening
Release Date: 02/22/2005
This "two-fer" from the
Collectables label includes 1973's
You Are the Sunshine of My Life and 1975's
Laughter in the Rain. The kitsch enthusiast or
novelty seeker will get a lot of pleasure from
Ray Conniff's
You Are the Sunshine of My Life. Known primarily for
orchestral versions of contemporary songs, his recordings during the late '60s and early '70s as
the Ray Conniff Singers included many straightforward recordings of current
pop hits. This collection contains some of
Conniff's most jaw-dropping covers, including
"Dueling Voices (Dueling Banjos)," which most will remember from the film
Deliverance. If you "get"
Ray Conniff and if you are adamant about the difference between him and
Lawrence Welk, then this track will be your latest musical addiction. The title track is from
Stevie Wonder's 1972 album
Talking Book, and other tracks include
"Tie a Yellow Ribbon 'Round the Old Oak Tree" popularized by
Tony Orlando,
Helen Reddy's
"Peaceful," Roberta Flack's
"Killing Me Softly," and
Gladys Knight's
"Neither One of Us." Another standout track is
"Bah Bah Conniff Sprach (Zarathustra)"! This is a great
easy listening pickup. The versions are slightly watered down and "safer," but more true to the originals than you'd expect. A cheerful artifact of the early '70s.
Laughter in the Rain doesn't deviate too far from
Sunshine's basic premise --
easy listening renditions of mellow gold hits like
Gordon Lightfoot's
"Sundown" and
"Cat's in the Cradle" by
Harry Chapin -- but it's just as entertaining and kitsch-worthy. Highlights include
"Seasons in the Sun," a track better known by
Terry Jacks and
the Kingston Trio, which is given the smoothed-over
Conniff Singers treatment, resulting in a tale of death that feels more like comfort food than it does a last meal, and
Paul Anka's cringe-inducing
"(You're) Having My Baby," which in the hands of
Conniff sounds more like an outtake from
Christopher Guest's
folk revival parody
A Mighty Wind.
Laughter in the Rain is as dependable as the artist himself, a perfect example of a man who understood his place in popular music and executed it accordingly.
~JT Griffith & James Christopher Monger, All Music Guide