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Comments

  • R.I.P Burt. I am a long time fan and had the great pleasure to saw him in concert in France in 2014. I think he had the chance to have a very interesting life full of drama and happiness…and full of music

  • Amazing career, body of work and legacy 🙏🏻

  • One of my favourite musicians growing up. I still love his music a lot. He lived a long life and left behind an amazing legacy. 😢

  • What great music and an amazing life.

  • 94 is a pretty good run… thanks for all the meter changes to keep it fresh and great arranging Burt. The “Butch Cassidy” score was a favorite for me:

  • Too many to count. My mom (and therefore me and my brother) was a huge Dionne Warwick fan. Just amazing, that collaboration.

    Coincidentally I was reading about Arthur Lee and Love just yesterday. “Little Red Book” was the band’s first big hit. But apparently Love started rehearsing the song right after seeing it in the movie “What’s New, Pussycat?” which had a very tame version by Manfred Mann. Love jammed on it from memory, getting the chord progression wrong in the process but recording it that way anyway. Bacharach hated it!

    Whatever, it’s great. They don’t make them like Burt anymore.

  • @McD said:
    94 is a pretty good run… thanks for all the meter changes to keep it fresh and great arranging Burt. The “Butch Cassidy” score was a favorite for me:

    Right on!

  • @ExAsperis99 said:
    Too many to count. My mom (and therefore me and my brother) was a huge Dionne Warwick fan. Just amazing, that collaboration.

    Coincidentally I was reading about Arthur Lee and Love just yesterday. “Little Red Book” was the band’s first big hit. But apparently Love started rehearsing the song right after seeing it in the movie “What’s New, Pussycat?” which had a very tame version by Manfred Mann. Love jammed on it from memory, getting the chord progression wrong in the process but recording it that way anyway. Bacharach hated it!

    Whatever, it’s great. They don’t make them like Burt anymore.

    Truth: “ They don’t make them like Burt anymore.” 🫡

  • What an amazing legacy to leave as a songwriter though. Amazing career that few can boast.

  • @michael_m said:
    What an amazing legacy to leave as a songwriter though. Amazing career that few can boast.

    He was a giant…a huge direct influence on about every songwriter who grew up in the 50s and 60s … and indirectly on everyone afterwards through the people he influenced.

    Kind of wild because he happened into pop music. As a young composer, he thought he’d take an avant-garde path. He had planned to follow in the footsteps of Darius Milhaud.

    I got to know him a bit when I was an adolescent. He wrote a note that I still have: “You have to practice more than 30 minutes a day.” It was a response to my mom telling him that I wanted to be a musician but didnt like to practice. He told me that he had wanted to be a baseball player when he was a kid and that his mom said “you can go out and play ball after you practice” and that he was glad he had listened to her.

    What a phenomenal gift for melody he had…and that sense of time! You never realize how weird the meters are till you try to play along.

  • Certainly made his mark and what a career. RIP.

  • one of my all time fav's. i have something like 30 burt and burt adjacent vinyls. my favorites are stan getz does burt bacharach and "reach out".

  • Another pure genius left...Very sad day...

  • RIP Burt. One of my heroes. 🙏

  • @espiegel123 said:

    @michael_m said:
    What an amazing legacy to leave as a songwriter though. Amazing career that few can boast.

    He was a giant…a huge direct influence on about every songwriter who grew up in the 50s and 60s … and indirectly on everyone afterwards through the people he influenced.

    Kind of wild because he happened into pop music. As a young composer, he thought he’d take an avant-garde path. He had planned to follow in the footsteps of Darius Milhaud.

    I got to know him a bit when I was an adolescent. He wrote a note that I still have: “You have to practice more than 30 minutes a day.” It was a response to my mom telling him that I wanted to be a musician but didnt like to practice. He told me that he had wanted to be a baseball player when he was a kid and that his mom said “you can go out and play ball after you practice” and that he was glad he had listened to her.

    What a phenomenal gift for melody he had…and that sense of time! You never realize how weird the meters are till you try to play along.

    Awesome!

  • Anyone Who Had A Heart, Marlene Dietrich, genius composer, beautiful head of hair, Gershwin Prize, Angie Dickinson…
    The man was a giant.
    Rest In Peace.

  • Loved his album with Elvis

  • My first contact with Bacharach was this awesome live medley by The Carpenters:
    R.I.P.

  • @espiegel123 said:

    @michael_m said:
    What an amazing legacy to leave as a songwriter though. Amazing career that few can boast.

    He was a giant…a huge direct influence on about every songwriter who grew up in the 50s and 60s … and indirectly on everyone afterwards through the people he influenced.

    Kind of wild because he happened into pop music. As a young composer, he thought he’d take an avant-garde path. He had planned to follow in the footsteps of Darius Milhaud.

    I got to know him a bit when I was an adolescent. He wrote a note that I still have: “You have to practice more than 30 minutes a day.” It was a response to my mom telling him that I wanted to be a musician but didnt like to practice. He told me that he had wanted to be a baseball player when he was a kid and that his mom said “you can go out and play ball after you practice” and that he was glad he had listened to her.

    What a phenomenal gift for melody he had…and that sense of time! You never realize how weird the meters are till you try to play along.

    He told you to practice! Burt Bacharach! My God. It would have scared me off of trying to write a melody ever! Any idea if he was aware of your Audulus patch mastery?

    Such a cool story.

  • @ExAsperis99 said:

    @espiegel123 said:

    @michael_m said:
    What an amazing legacy to leave as a songwriter though. Amazing career that few can boast.

    He was a giant…a huge direct influence on about every songwriter who grew up in the 50s and 60s … and indirectly on everyone afterwards through the people he influenced.

    Kind of wild because he happened into pop music. As a young composer, he thought he’d take an avant-garde path. He had planned to follow in the footsteps of Darius Milhaud.

    I got to know him a bit when I was an adolescent. He wrote a note that I still have: “You have to practice more than 30 minutes a day.” It was a response to my mom telling him that I wanted to be a musician but didnt like to practice. He told me that he had wanted to be a baseball player when he was a kid and that his mom said “you can go out and play ball after you practice” and that he was glad he had listened to her.

    What a phenomenal gift for melody he had…and that sense of time! You never realize how weird the meters are till you try to play along.

    He told you to practice! Burt Bacharach! My God. It would have scared me off of trying to write a melody ever! Any idea if he was aware of your Audulus patch mastery?

    Such a cool story.

    Right? Destined for greatness after that encounter 🙌🏽

  • @espiegel123 said:
    I got to know him a bit when I was an adolescent. He wrote a note that I still have: “You have to practice more than 30 minutes a day.”

    Did you follow his advice?

  • @Simon said:

    @espiegel123 said:
    I got to know him a bit when I was an adolescent. He wrote a note that I still have: “You have to practice more than 30 minutes a day.”

    Did you follow his advice?

    Yes

  • @ZankFrappa said:
    My first contact with Bacharach was this awesome live medley by The Carpenters:
    R.I.P.

    That took some work to pull off. Very impressive musicianship.

  • edited February 2023

    One of my favorites, written with Elvis Costello for the movie “Grace of my Heart.” (Kristen Vigard is singing, not Ileana Douglas, who regardless is great in the movie)

    But he had so many amazing songs.

    I got to see him (Burt, not Elvis) live a week after 9/11, and “What the World Needs Now” just hit what was needed then.

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