...That's the Way It Is

...That's the Way It Is
Studio album by Harry Nilsson
Released June 1976
Genre Pop Music
Length 32:15
Label RCA Victor
Producer Trevor Lawrence
Harry Nilsson chronology
Sandman
(1976)
...That's the Way It Is
(1976)
Knnillssonn
(1977)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [1]

...That's the Way It Is is the thirteenth album by Harry Nilsson.

The album includes a couple of original songs, but mostly consists of cover tunes. Some of the covers include: America ("I Need You" is from their 1971 album America), George Harrison ("That Is All" is from his 1973 album Living in the Material World, Randy Newman ("Sail Away" is from his 1972 album Sail Away), The Heartbeats' "A Thousand Miles Away," "Zombie Jamboree" (which was previously recorded by Lord Intruder, Kingston Trio, Harry Belafonte, and many others), and more. This album maybe symbolizes the last effort of what Harry started back in 1973, when he moved to Los Angeles. Released in 1976, most of the songs were actually recorded during the Sandman sessions of late 1975. The sound of both albums were pretty much the same, and it can also be said that Duit on Mon Dei has a similarity as well; the same musicians assisted Nilsson to make the albums, and the core of the list included: Jesse Ed Davis and Danny Kootch on guitars, Jim Keltner on drums, Kessel on piano, Al Kooper on percussions, and Klaus Voormann on bass, among others.

Track listing

No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "That Is All"   George Harrison 3:02
2. "Just One Look/Baby I'm Yours"   Gregory Carroll, Doris Payne/Van McCoy 3:17
3. "Moonshine Bandit"   Nilsson, Danny Kortchmar 3:26
4. "I Need You"   Gerry Beckley 3:14
5. "A Thousand Miles Away"   James Sheppard, William Miller 2:50
6. "Sail Away"   Randy Newman 3:40
7. "She Sits Down on Me"   Austin Talbot 3:55
8. "Daylight Has Caught Me"   Nilsson, Malcolm Rebennack 3:47
9. "Zombie Jamboree (Back to Back)"   Conrad E. Mauge, Jr. 3:02
10. "That Is All" (reprise) George Harrison 1:32

Track 2, "Just One Look/Baby I'm Yours" was a duet with Lynda Laurence, former Supreme and then-current wife to album producer, Trevor Lawrence.

Charts

Chart (1976) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard 200 158

References