The Four Aces - The Four Aces' Greatest Hits
Facts
| Artist(s) | The Four Aces |
| Studio | Mca |
| Release Date | September 28, 1993 |
| UPC Code | 008811088620 |
| Buy this item | $11.98 at Amazon.com As of Jul 23 17:22 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- Tell Me Why
- Perfidia
- Three Coins In The Fountain
- A Garden In The Rain
- You Brought Me Love
- (It's No) Sin
- Heart And Soul
- I'm Yours
- I Understand
- Stranger In Paradise
- The Gang That Sang 'Heart Of My Heart'
- Should I
- Love Is A Many Splendored Thing
- Heart
- It's A Woman's World
- Melody Of Love
- A Woman In Love
- Mister Sandman
Similar CDs
| 16 Most Requested Songs | The McGuire Sisters - Greatest Hits | Moments to Remember: Very Best of the Four Lads | Best of the Crew Cuts | The Four Freshmen - Capitol Collectors Series |
User Reviews
Average user review:| This Is The One You Want |
| give these men a spotlight !!! |
"Tell Me Why" opens the CD with a beautiful number that features The Four Aces singing at their very best. They harmonize beautifully; and the individual lyrics lack nothing--it's all THAT good. ""Tell Me Why" is a hauntingly beautiful number that I'm sure you're going to enjoy very much; this is classic Four Aces material and it proves their talent right from the start. "Perfidia" gets a great treatment; this peppy little number shines bright when The Four Aces sing it--the Latin beat gets replaced with a pop beat and it holds its own remarkably well considering how big a change they made in the musical arrangement. "Three Coins In The Fountain" is a very touching, moving ballad that actually won an Oscar for best song in a motion picture in March, 1955; and The Four Aces do justice to this great classic pop vocal with their exquisite sense of timing and their excellent diction. I love it!
"You Brought Me Love" has a fine organ arrangement and The Four Aces perform this with panache; the melody is perfect and the music that accompanies these men fits in perfectly with their vocals. Again we hear The Four Aces harmonizing flawlessly; and the individual lyrics that are sung are equally impressive. Excellent! In addition, listen for "Heart And Soul: this excellent classic pop tune really brings back memories of hearing my parents hum this tune to themselves as they went about their household chores.
"Stranger in Paradise" never sounded better than when The Four Aces sang it; I love their rendition--indeed, I believe that their rendition of "Stranger In Paradise" is THE definitive rendition of this timeless ballad. I know you'll like this number; "Stranger In Paradise" is easily a major highlight of this album. The Four Aces make it look so easy--but we know it was their exceptional talent that allowed them to give us this false impression. Singing this well requires great talent; and that's exactly what The Four Aces had.
"Love Is A Many-Splendored Thing" is another huge highlight of this album; The Four Aces were born to sing classic love songs like this one. The woodwind instruments add to the musical arrangement; and there's also "Heart" from the stage play "D*** Yankees." The Four Aces perform "Heart" with great style; and the backup vocalists sound great, too. The album ends with The Four Aces doing a sublime rendition of "Mister Sandman." "Mister Sandman" is a catchy pop tune from the 1950s that I always enjoy hearing; and The Four Aces do this so well it makes a very strong ending for this CD.
Fans of The Four Aces will consider this a must-have for their collections; and it also makes a great introductory CD for newcomers to the artistry of The Four Aces.
June 16, 2008
| Classic Sound Of The Time |
All I can say is, if The Four Aces are as bad as he describes them, then there must have been a worldwide epidemic of tin-ears among the millions upon millions who bought their records, and listened to their songs on radio and juke boxes, to a point where they chalked up 45 hit singles from 1951 to 1959.
You also have to think that the reviewer must have a personal grudge against Peter Grendysa, who wrote some of the most comprehensive liner notes [seven pages of them] you'll ever find in a single-disc CD package. Add to that several nice photographs, one with the luscious Mamie Van Doren, and a complete discography of the contents, and you have a nice, neat package which gives you sixteen of those hits, along with two flip-sides: You Brought Me Love which backed Perfidia (# 7 in 1952), and I Understand which was the B-side of I'm Yours (# 21) that same year.
Another nine of their hits can be found on More Greatest Hits. If I have a gripe it's that neither this CD nor More Greatest Hits contains Two Little Kisses, one of two releases by the Palda Record Company [on their Flash label] which made it to # 29 in 1952, the other being Sin which was their first hit [# 4] in 1951 on Palda's Victoria label.
If you know and loved The Four Aces you won't be turned away by the negativity in that other review. If you don't know them, this is one of the best examples of old-time, street-corner harmony you're apt to hear. Buy it. Enjoy it. September 2, 2007
| 4 Aces - Greatest Hits |
| The Four Aces |
More reviews at Amazon.com ...
