The Manhattan Transfer | |
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Manhattan Transfer from left to right: Janis Siegel, Cheryl Bentyne, Alan Paul and Tim Hauser |
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Background information | |
Origin | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Genres | A cappella, jazz fusion, pop, contemporary |
Years active | 1969–1971, 1972–1973, 1973–present |
Labels | Capitol, Music for Pleasure, Atlantic, Telarc |
Website | www.manhattantransfer.net |
Members | |
Tim Hauser Alan Paul Janis Siegel Cheryl Bentyne |
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Past members | |
Erin Dickins Marty Nelson Gene Pistilli Pat Rosalia Laurel Massé Larry Heard |
The Manhattan Transfer is an American vocal music group. There have been two manifestations of the group, with Tim Hauser being the only person to be part of both. The group's name comes from John Dos Passos' 1925 novel Manhattan Transfer and refers to their New York origins.
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The first manifestation of the group was established during 1969 in New York City by Tim Hauser, Erin Dickins, Marty Nelson, and Pat Rosalia. Gene Pistilli, a good friend, soon became an integral component, and composed for and recorded with the group. They contracted with Capitol Records, recorded several tracks, and during 1971 issued their first album, Jukin'. The album was later reissued in the UK by EMI's Music for Pleasure under the title The Manhattan Transfer and Gene Pistilli[1][2] Pistilli had been best known for his performing and songwriting collaborations with Terry Cashman and Tommy West. This team endured until 1973. According to Hauser, "Gene and I were in two different places. He was more into R&B, and the Memphis sound, and by then I'd become more interested in jazz and swing..."[3]
The next line-up of the group was formed in 1973 by Tim Hauser with singers Alan Paul, Janis Siegel, and Laurel Massé. After performances at Max's Kansas City, Trude Heller's and Reno Sweeney with Herb Abramson's A-1 Sound engineer Jim Reeves in New York City, the group developed a cult fan base. Ahmet Ertegün, founder and chairman of Atlantic Records, saw them at Reno Sweeney and offered a recording contract. The group's first album for Atlantic was The Manhattan Transfer in 1975, which included their first successful single, the gospel tune "Operator". During the summer of 1975, the group were showcased in their own hour-long television variety series on CBS.
They also gained a following in Europe, where their next two albums, Coming Out and Pastiche, brought a string of hits. One was a revival of Wayne Shanklin's "Chanson D'Amour", which became a number one hit in the UK and Australia in 1977, though it failed to chart in the US. These were followed by a live album, The Manhattan Transfer Live, which was recorded in the UK and reached the UK Top 5.
Soon after that album was recorded, during 1978, Laurel Massé was badly injured in a car accident and was replaced by Cheryl Bentyne. The line-up has remained the same since then.
Their next album, Extensions, was released in 1979 and earned the group their second U.S. popular music success, the disco hit "Twilight Zone/Twilight Tone", written by Alan Paul and Jay Graydon as a tribute to the 1960s CBS television series created by Rod Serling.[4] The track also reached the Top 30 in the UK, where the group continued to make several appearances on popular television shows such as The Two Ronnies.
Extensions also featured a cover of Weather Report's "Birdland", with lyrics by Jon Hendricks. One of the most popular jazz recordings of 1980, "Birdland" brought the group their first Grammy Award for Best Jazz Fusion Performance), and Janis Siegel was awarded the Grammy Award for Best Vocal Arrangement for Two or More Voices for her arrangement of "Birdland".
During 1981, The Manhattan Transfer made music history by becoming the first group to win Grammy awards for both popular and jazz categories in the same year. Boy from New York City and Other Hits (a cover of the 1965 success by The Ad Libs) reached the Top 10 on the Billboard 200 and won them the award for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal, and "Until I Met You (Corner Pocket)" earned them a Grammy for Best Jazz Performance, Duo or Group. Both of these songs appeared on the group's fifth album, Mecca for Moderns.
During 1982, the group won another Grammy, for Best Jazz Vocal Performance, Duo or Group, for its rendition of the classic ode-to-the-road, "Route 66". The song was featured on the soundtrack to the Burt Reynolds film Sharky's Machine.
In September 1983, the group released the album Bodies and Souls, with an urban-contemporary style which resulted in two R&B chart singles. The first was the #2 hit "Spice of Life", which was co-written by former Heatwave member Rod Temperton who had penned several hits for Michael Jackson. The single also reached #40 on the US pop chart and #19 in the UK. The other single, the ballad "Mystery" (#80 R&B, #102 Pop), was later recorded by Anita Baker on her 1986 album Rapture.
In 1985, the group released two albums - the first being Bop Doo-Wopp, an album that included both live and studio recordings. The group's next album, Vocalese received twelve Grammy nominations — at the time making it second only to Michael Jackson's Thriller as the most nominated single album ever. The group won in two categories: Best Jazz Vocal Performance, Duo or Group, and Best Arrangement for Voices. This was followed by a live recording of many of these songs titled Live. This concert, recorded in Japan, was also released on VHS and DVD, later titled as Vocalese Live.
For their next album, 1987's Brasil, the group headed south to work with Brazilian songwriters and musicians Ivan Lins, Milton Nascimento, Djavan and Gilberto Gil. Brasil won a Grammy for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.
The group did not release any more studio albums until 1991, when they signed with the Sony Music label and released The Offbeat of Avenues, featuring original material written or co-written by members of the quartet. Their efforts brought them their 10th Grammy award, for the song "Sassy". This was followed by the release of their first holiday album entitled The Christmas Album in 1992.
Switching back to Atlantic Records as their distributor, they released Tonin' (a collection of R&B and popular successes from the 1960s), The Manhattan Transfer Meets Tubby the Tuba (a children's album), and their 1997 album Swing which covered 1930s-era swing music. Their final album for the Atlantic company was The Spirit of St. Louis in 2000, dedicated to the music of Louis Armstrong.
The group was inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 1998.
The group signed to the Telarc label in 2003 to release Couldn't Be Hotter, a live performance capturing many of the songs from The Spirit of St. Louis.
In 2004, the group released the album Vibrate. This was another one of their “pastiche” albums, blending original tunes with older ones, pop, jazz, funk, etc. Vibrate featured such notable musicians as bassist Will Lee, and renowned time keeper Steve Hass on drums.
They also released (in Japan originally) their second holiday album, An Acapella Christmas, in 2005. The album was released in the US in 2006.
During 2006, the group released The Symphony Sessions, a collection of some of their best known songs re-recorded with an orchestra, and also The Definitive Pop Collection, a two-disc collection of the group's material from their time with Atlantic Records. They also recorded their first original title song for a movie, "Trail of the Screaming Forehead", and, in late 2006, the group released a new concert DVD, The Christmas Concert, and was broadcasted by PBS in select locations.
Their band's latest album, The Chick Corea Songbook, is a tribute to the works of American jazz musician Chick Corea and was released in September 2009. The album features an appearance by Corea himself on the track "Free Samba". Other notable musicians on this recording are Airto Moreira, Scott Kinsey, Gary Novak, Steve Hass, Alex Acuna, Jimmy Earl, John Benitez, and Christian McBride.
As of October 2011, The Manhattan Transfer are finishing an album of previously recorded but never finished songs, to honour their 40th anniversary. “We are working on a project now that is called The Vaults. Over the years, there are a lot of different songs that we recorded but never finished. We pull out from the archives a lot of these songs and are finishing them,” said Alan Paul in an interview for Jazz FM radio in Bulgaria[5]. One of the highlights of the album will be a vocalese version of George and Ira Gershwin’s The Man I Love, based on an Artie Shaw and his orchestra performance of the composition, that had been slated for the Swing album. “I wrote lyrics to Artie Shaw’s clarinet solo and then to all the other parts underneath. We become the vocal orchestra for Artie Shaw’s orchestra. The rhythm track was done with Ray Brown on bass, Yaron Gershovsky – our musical director – on piano, David Hungate on guitar and Duffy Jackson on drums. It was a wonderful track and we never got to do the vocals. So now we are in the studio putting down the vocals. This is like a dream come true for me because it is such an incredibly beautiful piece of music. After all these years to finally hear it being finished and done, is really wonderful”, said Alan Paul.
Album | Date released | Charts |
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Jukin' | 1971 | US #202 |
The Manhattan Transfer | 1975 | US #33, UK #49 (1977 release) |
Coming Out | 1976 | US #48, UK #12 |
Pastiche | 1978 | US #66, UK #10 |
The Manhattan Transfer Live | UK #4 | |
Extensions | 1979 | US #55, UK #63 |
Mecca for Moderns | 1981 | US #22 |
The Best of the Manhattan Transfer | US #103 | |
Bodies and Souls | 1983 | US #57, UK #53 |
Bop Doo-Wopp | 1985 | US #127 |
Vocalese | US #74 | |
Live | 1987 | US #187 |
Brasil | US #98 | |
The Offbeat of Avenues | 1991 | US #179 |
The Christmas Album | 1992 | US #120 |
Anthology: Down In Birdland | ||
The Very Best of the Manhattan Transfer | 1994 | US #157 |
The Manhattan Transfer Meets Tubby the Tuba | ||
Tonin' | 1995 | US #123 |
Man-Tora! Live in Tokyo | 1996 | |
Swing | 1997 | |
Boy From New York City And Other Hits | ||
The Spirit of St. Louis | 2000 | |
Couldn't Be Hotter | 2003 | |
Vibrate | 2004 | |
An Acapella Christmas | 2005 | |
The Symphony Sessions | 2006 | |
The Definitive Pop Collection | ||
The Chick Corea Songbook | 2009 |
Year | Song | US Hot 100 | U.S. AC | UK Singles Chart[6] | Canada |
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1975 | "Operator" | 22 | 34 | - | 26 |
1976 | "Tuxedo Junction" | - | - | 24 | - |
1977 | "Chanson D'Amour" | - | 16 | 1 | - |
"Don't Let Go" | - | - | 32 | - | |
1978 | "Walk In Love" | - | - | 12 | |
"On a Little Street in Singapore" | - | - | 20 | - | |
"Where Did Our Love Go/Je Voulais Te Dire (Que Je T'Attends)" | - | - | 40 | ||
1979 | "Who What Where When Why" | - | - | 49 | - |
1980 | "Twilight Zone/Twilight Tone" | 30 | - | 25 | - |
"Trickle Trickle" | 73 | - | - | - | |
1981 | "The Boy from New York City" | 7 | 4 | - | 8 |
"Smile Again" | - | 41 | - | - | |
1982 | "Spies in the Night" | 103 | - | - | - |
"Route 66" | 78 | 22 | - | - | |
1983 | "Spice of Life" | 40 | 5 | 19 | - |
1984 | "Mystery" | 102 | 6 | - | - |
"Baby Come Back to Me (The Morse Code of Love)" | 83 | 14 | - | - | |
1987 | "Soul Food to Go (Sina)" | - | 25 | - | - |
1995 | "Too Busy Thinking About My Baby" (with Phil Collins) | - | 27 | - |
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