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Music

Burt showing off his six-pack

June 13, 2013 12:16
Beautifully composed: Bacharach

By

Paul Lester,

Paul Lester

1 min read

There aren’t many composers, American or British, who could support a six-CD box set of their work, but Burt Bacharach — who has just turned 85 and is due to perform in Israel for the first time in July — is one such giant of post-war song. The last major collection of his music was The Look Of Love, a mere three-CD affair from 1998. It is dwarfed by this massive trove, which is divided into distinct parts.

You get a sense not just of the length of Bacharach’s career — 60 years and counting — but the breadth, via the thematic sequencing of the CDs. Disc one covers the period before he achieved international recognition for his breathtaking melodies and the huge number of hits he co-wrote with lyricist Hal David (who sadly died last year). But, even here, starting in the ’50s, there are signs of the massive commercial breakthrough to come with Baby It’s You by The Shirelles and Perry Como’s Magic Moments.

There are more than two dozen products of the Bacharach-David partnership on disc two. For three years in the early-to-mid-60s, the duo were responsible for more flawless hit singles than any other partnership, with the possible exception of Lennon and McCartney. There's Walk On By, A House Is Not A Home, Anyone Who Had A Heart, Wives And Lovers and I Say A Little Prayer, many of them recorded with Dionne Warwick, the best-known interpreter of the Bacharach-David songbook. Of course, Bacharach conjured up a world of affairs and Martinis, bourgeois anxiety and chic sophistication far removed from the ragged rebellion of the rock generation.

The third disc covers Bacharach’s forays into movie soundtracks, with theme tunes and scores for What’s New Pussycat?, Casino Royale and Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid.