The Peggy Lee Bio-Discography And Videography:
The Atlantic Contract
by Iván Santiago-Mercado

Generated on Jan 22, 2012

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Peggy Lee's Recording Career, 1974

After recording exclusively on 2 record labels for nearly 30 consecutive years (1944-1972), Peggy Lee signed a short-term contract with Atlantic Records in 1974. The contract generated one album, released that same year, and a few singles-oriented sessions, whose resulting masters were left unissued, for the most part, until the CD era. Additional comments about Lee's stay at Atlantic can be found in the note at the end of this page. For details about any release of Peggy Lee's original Atlantic album Let's Love outside of the United States, consult this discography's foreign issues page. (Side note: Looking for CD recommendations? Throughout this discography, recommended items are highlighted by my use of bold uppercase on their titles.)


Date: April 23, 1974
Location: The Record Plant, Los Angeles
Label: ATLANTIC

Peggy Lee (ldr), Dave Grusin (pdr, p), Peggy Lee (pdr, v), Phil Schier (eng), Other Individuals Unknown (acc)

a.35321   MasterI Wanna Be Seduced - 2:31  (Gary Tigerman) / arr: Dave Grusin
b.35322   MasterI Am His Lady - 4:00  (Morgan Ames) / arr: Dave Grusin
c.   MasterLet's Love - 3:57  (Paul McCartney, Linda Louise McCartney) / arr: Dave Grusin
All titles on:      www~ Rhino Handmade [Warner-owned] CD: Rhm2 7853 — LET'S LOVE   (2003)


The Recording Session

The apparent purpose of this session was the production of a single. However, no single was ever issued. Atlantic was probably more interested in releasing the number that Paul McCartney would be producing for the singer (see session dated first week of June 1974).

Lee's versions of "I Wanna Be Seduced" and "I Am His Lady" were not released until the CD era. The songs, both new at the time that Lee recorded them, became known instead through versions by other singers. (In 1975, "I Am His Lady" became a minor, #82 Billboard chart hit for r&b singer Melba Moore, who recorded the song for Buddha Records. The song made another appearance in 1976, as a track from Ernestine Anderson's first Concord Jazz album. "I Wanna Be Seduced" was recorded by Leon Redbone for the soundtrack of Richard Dreyfuss' 1978 movie The Big Fix, then sung live by Dreyfuss himself in a televised Saturday Night Live appearance. Redbone re-recorded it for his 1981 album From Branch To Branch. In more recent times, singer Mary Coughlan has also recorded and performed it.)


Songs

1. "I Am His Lady"
2. "Runnin' Like A River"
Atlantic's record files incorrectly list "I Am His Lady" under the title "Runnin' Like A River," which is actually the first line of the song's lyric.


Songwriters

1. Who Composed "I Wanna Be Seduced"?
Various sources mistakenly credit Peggy Lee as the songwriter of "I Wanna Be Seduced." Gary Tigerman, the actual songwriter, was a staff writer for Warner at the time of this session. The error has made its way into the otherwise excellent CD Rhino Handmade #7853.


Masters, Dating And Cross-references

1. "Let's Love"
This master of "Let's Love" (the earliest of three) is not listed in Michel Ruppli's catalogue of Atlantic masters, which is one of my main sources for Lee's Atlantic sessions. Information about the master comes only from Paul Grein's liner notes for Rhino Handmade CD #7853: "Lee and Grusin also produced a version of Let's Love that is slower and more languid than the one that [Paul] McCartney oversaw. They recorded it in April, before they were sure that McCartney would be able to find time to produce the song."

Notice that Grein's quote gives the month, but does not give the exact day on which the song was recorded. Until more specific information comes along, and thus as a temporary measure, I have incorporated this Lee-Grusin version of "Let's Love" in this April 23 session. For the other two versions of "Let's Love," see session dated first week of June 1, 1974.


Arrangements

Preserved in Peggy Lee's sheet music library are the arrangements for the three above-entered numbers. In all of them, Dave Grusin is identified as the arranger.


Date: Late April 1974
Location: The Record Plant & Westlake Audio, Los Angeles
Label: ATLANTIC

Peggy Lee (ldr), Dave Grusin (pdr, con, p, fen, snt, per), Peggy Lee (pdr, v), Phil Schier (eng), Erno Neufeld (ccm), Pete Christlieb (f, ts), Jerome Richardson (ss, as, bar), Charles "Chuck" Findley (t), Frank Rosolino (tb), Vincent DeRosa (frh), Gene Cipriano (o), Dennis Budimir, Dan Ferguson, Lee Ritenour, David T. Walker (g), Chuck Rainey (b), Unknown (str), George Gaffney (p), Dick Borden (d), Harvey Mason (d, per), Bobbye Hall (cng), Jim Gilstrap, Joe Green, Marti McCall, Jackie Ward, Edna Wright (bkv)

a.29426   MasterHe Is The One - 4:24  (Melissa Manchester) / arr: Dave Grusin
     USA Government's "Basic Music Library" Series radio transcription: P 14933 — [AFRS] Basic Music Library [5 songs from LP Let's Love]   (1974)
b.29427   MasterEasy Evil - 4:36  (Alan O'Day) / arr: Dave Grusin
     USA Government's "Basic Music Library" Series radio transcription: P 14933 — [AFRS] Basic Music Library [5 songs from LP Let's Love]   (1974)
c.29428   MasterDon't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight - 4:04  (James Taylor) / arr: Artie Butler, Dave Grusin, Peggy Lee
     USA Government's "Basic Music Library" Series radio transcription: P 14933 — [AFRS] Basic Music Library [5 songs from LP Let's Love]   (1974)
     ATLANTIC CS/LP/CD: 81706 / Box 81712 [released in 1990] — [Various Artists] Singers ("Atlantic Jazz" Series)    (1986)
d.29429   MasterAlways - 3:51  (Irving Berlin) / arr: Dave Grusin
     ATLANTIC 45: 3215 — {Let's Love / Always}   (1974)
     USA Government's "Basic Music Library" Series radio transcription: P 14933 — [AFRS] Basic Music Library [5 songs from LP Let's Love]   (1974)
e.29430   MasterYou Make Me Feel Brand New - 5:55  (Thom Bell, Linda Creed) / arr: Dave Grusin
f.29431   MasterSweet Lov'liness - 3:53  (Max R. Bennett) / arr: Dave Grusin
g.29432   MasterThe Heart Is A Lonely Hunter - 3:04  (Dave Grusin, Peggy Lee) / arr: Dave Grusin
     ATLANTIC 45: (France) 10545 — {Let's Love / The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter} [not released in the USA]   (1974)
h.29433   MasterSweet Talk - 3:24  (Don Sebesky) / arr: Dave Grusin
i.29434   MasterSometimes - 2:25  (Henry Mancini, Felice Mancini) / arr: Dave Grusin
     USA Government's "Basic Music Library" Series radio transcription: P 14933 — [AFRS] Basic Music Library [5 songs from LP Let's Love]   (1974)
All titles on:      ATLANTIC 8-track/LP: {8t}/Sd 18108 — Let's Love   (1974)
     www~ Rhino Handmade [Warner-owned] CD: Rhm2 7853 — LET'S LOVE   (2003)
     www~ Collectors' Choice CD: 2077 — Let's Love ("Hepcat" Series)    (2009)


The Let's Love Album Sessions (Cross-references)

Dates: Late April and early June 1974.


Dating

The sources at my reach give different dates to the nine songs listed in this session:

July 17, 1974
This is the one date assigned to all twelve album masters in Atlantic's masters file. My source for the date is not the file itself but Michel Ruppli's book Atlantic Records: A Discography (Greenwood Press, 1979). Lee's recording of so many songs on the same day is highly unlikely. Instead, the 17th may have been the day on which all performances were assigned a master, and/or were sequenced for the album. Another possibility, albeit an unlikelier one: July 17 could have been the first of various consecutive days during which the sessions took place.

April 1974
This is the date given in the booklet of Rhino Handmade CD #7853. Both the discographical notes and the essay in the booklet identify April 1974 as the recording period. I assume that the creators of Rhino Handmade CD #7853 retrieved this dating from an Atlantic file different from the one consulted by Ruppli.

In the absence of any further specifics or additional sources, I have chosen April over July. My choice is a tentative one.


Location And Masters

1. Remixes
This session's performances were recorded at the Record Plant Studio, then remixed at Westlake Studio.


Personnel

1. Erno Neufeld
Erno Neufeld arranged and conducted the of strings only.

2. Dick Borden
3. George Gaffney
The two above-listed musicians played only on "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight" and "Always."

4. Background vocals
Background vocals are heard on "He Is The One," "You Make Me Feel Brand New," and "Sweet Lov'liness" only.

5. Vocal Overdub
On "Sweet Talk," and in the main, titular line of "Easy Evil," the female serving as background vocalist seems to be Peggy Lee herself, her voice overdubbed.


Arrangements

1. "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight"
"Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight" was adapted by Peggy Lee and Dave Grusin from an arrangement by Artie Butler.

2. Dave Grusin
The back cover of the LP Let's Love identifies Dave Grusin as the arranger (or, in the case of "Don't Let Me Be Lonely," co-arranger) of all the performances in the album, except for "Let's Love." Furthermore, the album's scores are extant in Peggy Lee's sheet music library; all of them indeed credit Grusin as the arranger.


Collectors' Notes

1. Amemos [LP]
A Peggy Lee album by the title of Amemos is actually a Spanish pressing of the LP Let's Love. Although I myself have not come across physical copies of this Spanish pressing, I have seen photos of its cover online. Except for the title in Spanish, the cover is identical to the American original. The catalogue number that I have seen for it online (Gemma Gx 01 750) is probably erroneous; perhaps it points to an auction at the music website Gemm.

2. Atlantic #3215 [45]
A collectible photo of Peggy Lee graces the front cover of Atlantic single #3215. Although it is the same photo featured in the cover of the album Let's Love, this shot is at a closer range, and thus offers viewers a better look at the singer's face and at the microphone that she is holding.

3. Atlantic #10545 [45]
4. Atlantic #105727 [45]
Generally, this sessionography omits foreign 45s which have an identical American original counterpart. (I have listed all such 'omissions' under the Miscellanea section of this discography.) In the case of French Atlantic single #10545, I have entered it in this sessionography for two reasons. The main one is that, although it does feature the same song ("Let's Love") as its American counterpart on one side, on the flip side it features a different number.

The second reason pertains to its sleeve: it is different from the American one, and thus collectible. The front features no photo; it is just a blue background, blank except for the singer's name in white and the words "let's love" in pink. The back includes, on the other hand, the same photo used on the front cover of the LP, though reprinted in very small size. (For a look at a reproduction of this French sleeve, front and back, see the booklet of Rhino Handmade CD #7853.)

I have also seen online photos of German Atlantic single #105727. It shows no significant variations from the American counterpart.

5. Atlantic P 1347A [45]
Another collectible of potential interest to fans of both Lee and McCartney is the Japanese Atlantic single P 1347A: its back cover shows a photo of Peggy Lee and Paul McCartney at the piano. That photo is not found in the American and French counterparts of the single. Otherwise, aside from the photo on the back and the language on the sleeve, the Japanese single shows no major differences with the American original.


Date: First Week Of June 1974
Location: The Record Plant, Los Angeles
Label: ATLANTIC

Paul McCartney (pdr, p), Alan Parsons, Pat Stapley (eng), Other Individuals Unknown (acc), Unknown (str, wds), Peggy Lee (v)

a.29425   MasterLet's Love - 2:58  (Paul McCartney, Linda Louise McCartney) / arr: Paul McCartney
     ATLANTIC 45: 3215 — {Let's Love / Always}   (1974)
     ATLANTIC 45: (France) 10545 — {Let's Love / The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter} [not released in the USA]   (1974)
     ATLANTIC©WEA LP: (Germany) 48 008 — [Various Artists] 20 United Stars Of America   (1976)
b.29435   MasterLet's Love (Reprise) [Edit of 29425] - 1:20  (Paul McCartney, Linda Louise McCartney) / arr: Paul McCartney
Both titles on:      ATLANTIC 8-track/LP: {8t}/Sd 18108 — Let's Love   (1974)
     www~ Rhino Handmade [Warner-owned] CD: Rhm2 7853 — LET'S LOVE   (2003)
     www~ Collectors' Choice CD: 2077 — Let's Love ("Hepcat" Series)    (2009)


The Let's Love Album Sessions (Cross-references)

Dates: Late April and early June 1974.


The Recording Session (And Its Dating)

The sources available to me offer two possible dates for this session's masters (and also for all masters on Atlantic LP #18108): early June 1974 (according to Rhino Handmade CD #7853) or July 17, 1974 (according to Michel Ruppli's Atlantic Records: A Discography). I have chosen the date offered by the Rhino Handmade CD, in which liner annotator Paul Grein states: [Paul] McCartney produced the backing track for "Let's Love" at Abbey Road studios in London on May 18. The first week of June, he recorded Lee's vocal at the Record Plant. Atlantic invited some press people to a photo and playback session.. The CD's discographical notes give the early June dating as well.

One of Grein's sources is clearly an article entitled "The Generation Bridge," published by Zoo World magazine on July 18, 1974. Len Epand, the article's writer, mentions that Lee & McCartney were producing the song one day the first week of June. Epand adds that, after a day's work, they held a mini press conference/photo session around Studio C’s grand piano. In high spirits, they casually sang a couple of songs together, elaborated on their surprising collaboration and then took the small mob into the control room to hear the finished track.

For further details about the date not chosen (July 17, 1974) see notes under session dated April 1974.


Songs

1. "Let's Love" In The Music Charts
The song "Let's Love" was Peggy Lee's 70th and last entry in Billboard's song charts. She had made her debut with "I Got It Bad" in 1941, when she was part of The Benny Goodman Orchestra. Her first entry as a solo artist was, according to Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories, 1890-1954, "Waitin' For The Train To Come In" in 1945.

"Let's Love" peaked at #22 in Billboard's Easy Listening chart during the week of November 2, 1974. (At number one was John Denver, with "Back Home Again.") "Let's Love" also charted in the Contemporary Adult chart of Canada's RPM Weekly, where it peaked at #41 in the December 21, 1974 issue.

2. "Let's Love (Reprise)"
This so-called reprise, actually an edit, consists of a couple of choruses plus the closing line from master #29425.

3. "Let's Love" (Cross-references)
For an earlier performance of the song "Let's Love," see session dated April 23, 1974, including notes.


Songwriters

1. Paul & Linda McCartney
All issues containing the song "Let's Love" list Paul McCartney as its sole author. However, ASCAP lists both Paul and his first wife, Linda McCartney.

The aforementioned article by Epand indicates that the song was originally brought to Lee by the couple as a dinner present while she was in London. In another article ("Peggy Lee: A Consummate Artist," published by Record World Magazine on December 27, 1975), Lee retells the story, but links the writing specifically to Paul: "When he got to the hotel he said that rather than bring champagne or roses, he was writing a song for me. And it was almost complete, maybe two bars left to write. Then they [i.e., Linda and Paul] came to California and they were at my house for dinner, so he played it for me."

Despite the fact that I have come across various errors previously in ASCAP's online database, I have chosen to trust it in this instance. Therefore, I have tentatively added Linda McCartney's name to the list of songwriters. (I'd rather err not on the side of omission, but on the side of addition. Corrections from anyone better informed on this matter would be appreciated.)


Date: June 7, 1974
Location: The Record Plant, Los Angeles
Label: ATLANTIC

Peggy Lee (ldr), Dave Grusin (pdr, p), Peggy Lee (pdr, v, spk), Other Individuals Unknown (acc)

a.35563   MasterThe Nickel Ride - 4:48  (Dave Grusin, Peggy Lee) / arr: Dave Grusin
     www~ Rhino Handmade [Warner-owned] CD: Rhm2 7853 — LET'S LOVE   (2003)


Songs

1. "The Nickel Ride"
This song comes from the 1974 Twentieth Century-Fox movie The Nickel Ride, which was scored by Dave Grusin. However, Lee's lyrics are not heard in the movie soundtrack. Perhaps she wrote them after the movie had been already produced, or perhaps she did write them for inclusion in the movie, but they were not used.


Dating

As is the case with previously entered Atlantic sessions, two possible recording dates are in contention for this session: June 7, 1974 (the date found in Michel Ruppli's Atlantic Records: A Discography) and April 1974 (the month on which, according to Rhino Handmade CD #7853, Lee recorded all her Atlantic numbers, except for the McCartney-produced song "Let's Love").

Until further information becomes available, I am choosing the more specific date (June 7, 1974) over the collective one (April 1974). My choice relies chiefly on a presumed correlation between dates and master sequence: since the master number for "The Nickel Ride" is higher than the numbers assigned to Lee's other Atlantic masters, there is a good chance than this performance was recorded much later than the others. In any case, this session's dating should be deemed tentative.


Arrangements

1. Dave Grusin
Dave Grusin's arrangement of "The Nickel Ride" is extant, under his name, in Peggy Lee's sheet music library.


Peggy Lee With Dave Grusin And Paul McCartney At Atlantic Records

Two years after parting ways with Capitol, Peggy Lee signed a deal with Atlantic Records. Promotional material sent to the press at the time would state that "Atlantic Executive Producer Nesuhi Ertegun ... signed Miss Lee to the label after years of being a fan of hers." The singer's main bargaining point was probably her possession of a song that Paul McCartney had just written for her, and which he had tentatively offered to produce. Using the McCartney song as a stepping stone, Lee and her associates must have proceeded to talk Atlantic into endorsing the making of a full album and a couple of singles.

When it became clear that Lee would be recording contemporaneous tunes in a soulful style, Atlantic must have felt that the prospective album had commercial potential. Thanks to acts such as Roberta Flack and Donny Hathaway, the soul genre had proved very successful for the label. Also under contract with the label at this time were Hall & Oates, whose 1973 album Abandoned Luncheonette evinced the brand of blue-eyed soul (aka pop soul) for which they would become better-known in later years. Lee's work for Atlantic can thus be deemed part of the label's experiments in pop soul.

It is not clear why Lee recorded no further material for Atlantic after 1974. Since the McCartney single had only moderate success, and since Lee's album made no dent in the charts, Atlantic might have seen no reason to extend the contract. Of course, many other reasons are possible as well. During an interview with Eliot Tiegel in 1990, Lee seemed to attribute the closure of the relationship to the same kind of corporate shake-up that she had previously seen happen at Capitol: "The last album I did for Capitol, Norma Delores Egstrom From Jamestown, North Dakota, got lost in a new management shuffle and wasn’t distributed properly. Then I went to Atlantic to do Let’s Love and Paul McCartney wrote the title tune, and you can’t get much better than that. Just about the time it was going to be shipped I called Atlantic and the lady answered the phone and said, ‘Warner/Elektra/Atlantic,’ and I thought, ‘Oh-oh, the wrong number or I’m in trouble again.’" (Atlantic had been undergoing corporate changes since the late 1960s. In 1967, it had been bought by Warner, which was in turn sold to the Kinney National Company in 1969. Kinney then bought Elektra in 1970 and at some point afterwards the new family of labels was re-named WEA, or Warner-Elektra-Atlantic. When it was first issued in 1974, Lee's album bore just the Atlantic logo. Ads in the press identify it as a release from "Atlantic Recording Co., A Warner Communications Company.")


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