Tony Bennett I Left My Heart in San Francisco on Numbered-Edition 180g 33RPM LP from Mobile Fidelity: Landmark 1962 Vocal Pop Set Established His Career
Audiophile Version Is Out of Print
1/4" / 15 IPS analog master to DSD 64 to analog console to lathe
Can there really be a definitive album from a singer whose voice is one of the most immediately recognized and internationally cherished, and whose command of songs is akin to the manner in which an able-bodied masseuse handles delicate muscle tissues? If so, then I Left My Heart in San Francisco is that record, the 1962 effort a turning point for the great Tony Bennett and an all-time pop standard. Winner of two Grammy Awards, the record contains Bennett’s signature track as well as eleven other indelible classics.
Mastered from the original master tapes, Mobile Fidelity’s numbered-edition 180g LP presents Bennett in the finest sound he’s ever enjoyed. Amazingly, this landmark recording has lavished in the vaults over the years and longed for the restoration that meticulous engineering can bring. Gone is the veiled haze that hung over the orchestrations, artificial ceiling that held back the highs, and cloudiness that obscured the entire range of Bennett’s vocals. Previously unheard levels of warmth, expressiveness, and detailing are just some of the hallmarks of this terrific audiophile delight.
At the time of the album’s sessions, Bennett found himself caught between the need to sing thin uptempo numbers in order to appease the marketplace and the desire to move beyond the jazzier material he tackled in the late 50s. Unwilling to compromise his will to sing ballads and swing, Bennett, along with producer Ernest Altschuler and arranger/pianist Ralph Sharon, found the perfect combination on I Left My Heart in San Francisco, replete with expansive orchestration, period echo, anthemic ballads, and lush pop arrangements that still leave plenty of room for intimacy and delicacy.
There’s little left to say about the timeless title track, amidst the most definitive songs ever recorded. Similarly, the closing “The Best Is Yet to Come” ranks equally high, with Bennett’s rendition coming a full two years before Frank Sinatra’s version. It’s no wonder why The Voice deemed Bennett his favorite singer. The proof is everywhere, whether on the brassy “Rules of the Road,” big-band bossa nova send-up of Cole Porter’s “Love for Sale,” tender “Have I Told You Lately?,” or the white-gloves treatment of the Broadway tune “Once Upon a Time.” Bennett’s charismatic personality and refined singing ring true throughout, his burnished baritone as clear as spring water.
Now, hear this triumphant performance as if Bennett is singing to you on a private stage. Witness every breath, and experience the thrill of the singer holding a note for what seems like eternity on “I’m Always Chasing Rainbows” without flinching. Seldom, if ever, has a vocalist’s singing sounded so effortlessly natural and innate.
"In addition to Bennett's own hits are songs from stage and screen, delivered with a 'cool' that swings with the ease of Dino and the assurance of Frank. Here, though, we must also address the sound. Trust me, it's to-die-for, a perfect example of the 1960s 'Columbia Sound.'"
--Ken Kessler, Hi-Fi News
2. "Once Upon a Time" (Charles Strouse, Lee Adams) – 3:02
3. "Tender Is the Night" (Sammy Fain, Paul Francis Webster) – 2:41
4. "Smile" (Charles Chaplin, Geoffrey Claremont Parsons, John Turner) – 2:51
5. "Love for Sale" (Cole Porter) – 3:10
6. "Taking a Chance on Love" (Vernon Duke, Ted Fetter, John Latouche) – 1:56
7. "Candy Kisses" (George Morgan) – 2:28
8. "Have I Told You Lately?" (Harold Rome) – 2:41
9. "Rules of the Road" (Cy Coleman, Carolyn Leigh) – 2:37
10. "Marry Young" (Coleman, Leigh) – 2:22
11. "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows" (Harry Carroll, Joseph McCarthy) – 2:43
12. "The Best Is Yet to Come" (Coleman, Leigh) – 2:29