Carly Simon – Carly Simon
Carly Simon – Carly Simon
Carly Simon – Carly Simon
Carly Simon – Carly Simon
Carly Simon – Carly Simon
Carly Simon – Carly Simon
Carly Simon – Carly Simon
Carly Simon – Carly Simon

Carly Simon – Carly Simon (Hybrid SACD)

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Vocal - Carly Simon [click here to see more vinyl featuring Carly Simon]

Pianist, keyboards – Mark Klingman

Written by Carly Simon (1-4, 7-9), Jacob Brackman 1,6), Mark Moogy Klingman (5), Freddy Gardner (6), Eddie Kramer (8), Billy Mernit (8), Buzzy Linhart (10)

 

1 SACD, gatefold jacket

Limited numbered edition

Original analog Master tape : YES

Stereo

Studio

Label : MOFI

Original Label : Elektra

Recorded at Electric Lady Studios, New York, NY, February 1971

Engineered by Dave Palmer, Ed Kramer

Produced by Eddie Kramer

Mastered by Rob LoVerde

Art Direction, design by Robert L. Heimall

Photography by Joel Brodsky, Peter Simon

Originally released in 1971

Reissued in 2024


Tracks:

    1. That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be

     2. Alone

     3. One More Time

     4. The Best Thing

     5. Just a Sinner

     6. Dan, My Fling

     7. Another Door

     8. Reunions

     9. Rolling Down the Hills

     10. The Love’s Still Growing

     

     

    Reviews :

    "That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be," the leadoff track of Carly Simon's first album and a Top Ten hit, in which the singer expresses reservations about getting married, benefited from a sense of role reversal -- it's such a guy sentiment, but sung by a woman in 1971, it came across as a feminist statement, consistent with the overall disillusionment so prevalent then. Nothing on the rest of the album was quite as pointed, though the other songs maintained the same ambivalence toward romance. The one other standout track, "Dan, My Fling," in which the singer tries to rekindle a relationship with a man she has discarded, was, like the single, co-written by Jacob Brackman (in this case, with Fred Gardner, not Simon), suggesting that the real creative talent here was him and not her (especially since the writing credits also featured another four names). And since Simon, with her plaintive, proper, and relatively inexpressive voice, was such an unremarkable performer, her debut seemed less auspicious than the attention it attracted might have implied."  AllMusic Review by William Ruhlmann

     

    Ratings :

    AllMusic : 3.5 / 5 ; Discogs : 4.37 / 5

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