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Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Helen Reddy's Songwriter Friend Reposts My Story of Meeting Helen! And How Helen Told Me to Get Harriet to sign her Hollywood Town album, which I did in L.A. 1991

 

Harriet writes:

An interesting story from Joe Viglione about how I met him and how he met Helen Reddy:
"So after Helen played the S & M bar The Haymarket (I'm not kidding you) singing to tracks of her songs, the drag queens were all dressed like her...she said "I guess this is why y'all came" (5 drag queens and Helen...it was a sight) she went into I Am Woman...
 
My ex Donald and I went around the corner to the hotel, saw her on the street, I had her sign her album, gave her my album New Changes with a version of her Love Song for Jeffrey which I covered and asked her to sign Hollywood Town and she said "Have Harriet sign it." ! And that was my moment with Helen." (Don and I were NOT into S & M...we just liked going to the club. RIP Don, a dear, dear friend.)
__________________________ 
And this was how I met Joe. A lifelong friend!
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Harriet also writes: I am also grateful to her for my friendship with you. I have many reasons to be thankful to Helen. Not the least of which is that she covered my song Mama also and my mother got to hear her in concert and meet her. 
 

AllMusic Review by  [-]


Smooth are the performances and orchestration on this 1978 double-vinyl set. There is no date of this performance by Helen Reddy, recorded at the London Palladium. This expands her greatest-hits album and allows the entertainer to display her personality as well as some of her deeper album tracks. Of the 26 songs here, only Leon Russell and Harriet Schock share the distinction of having two compositions each covered by the songstress. Russell's "This Masquerade" and "Bluebird" follow Ralph Shuckett's "Rhythm Rhapsody" to start the concert off. Reddy sprinkles a hit or two per side until the medley, adding nuggets like Gale Garnett's timeless "We'll Sing in the Sunshine," which is a perfect selection for Reddy to sing and her audience to hear. Harriet Schock's "Mama" from the Music, Music album is one of the longest tracks at four minutes-plus, and gets a lengthy audience response. Cilla Black's 1964 hit "You're My World," like the aforementioned Gale Garnett hit from the same year, suits Reddy well. Live in London is a title used by scores of artists, from the Beach Boys to Petula Clark, Deep Purple, April Wine, Judy Garland, Glen Campbell, and so many others. This recording has lead guitarist Lenny Coltun conducting the Gordon Rose Orchestra with guitarist Ritchie Zito, keyboard player Tom Hensley, and others supplying the sound. Reddy gives renditions of Billy Joel's "The Entertainer," "Poor Little Fool" by Jeff Lynne, who shows up on the All This and World War II soundtrack with Reddy and who wrote this dramatic number for her, as well as Adam Miller's "The West End Circus." There's Alan O'Day's unconventional "Angie Baby" to open side two, and the song works better live, oozing with a thick and smooth sound. Producers John Palladino and Helen Reddy do a commendable job of capturing so many instruments and vocals and putting them into a wonderful mix. The album gets high marks for sound quality and performance, a classy snapshot of Helen Reddy's complete repertoire of hits from 1971-1977 with the exception of "Somewhere in the Night" and the flip of "I Can't Hear You No More," "Music Is My Life." For the fans of Helen Reddy this is a treat and a very necessary part of her collection.

https://www.allmusic.com/album/live-in-london-mw0000219194
 
https://www.allmusic.com/album/helen-reddy-capitol-mw0000867021

AllMusic Review by

Helen Reddy's second album contains two originals, as well as covers of material by John Lennon, Carole King and Toni Stern, Randy Newman, Donovan Leitch, Leon Russell, and Alex Harvey. Over the years Reddy would continue to cover material by Carole King, Leon Russell, and Harvey; both she and Bette Midler covering Harvey's "Delta Dawn," with Reddy getting the chart hit. Here her rendition of his "Tulsa Turnaround" is intriguing and gives a good indication of the direction her music would take. These are very personal readings of Paul Parrish's"Time" and Leon Russell's "I Don't Remember My Childhood"; the accompaniment is laid-back and subdued, unlike Reddy's Love Song for Jeffrey album. Producer Larry Marks has a haunting foundation for David Blue's "Come on John," and one wonders if like Mama Cass on "I Call Your Name" or Janis Joplin's "Happy Birthday John Lennon," Reddy isn't singing this to the Beatle? Her rendition of Lennon's solo tune, "How?," is a rarity for the singer -- and as sparse as the Plastic Ono Band, minus what backed her on the soundtrack to All This and World War II when she performed "Fool on the Hill." The album Helen Reddy has a cover photo of the vocalist wearing a red and blue dress in ankle-deep water, a resting point before her cluster of Top 40 recordings. Donovan's "New Year's Resolution" and Carole King/Toni Stern's "No Sad Songs" give the singer a platform to help craft her sound. It's a nice glimpse of the naïve side of Reddy and a pleasant listening experience, though it was the only one of her early albums not to find representation on her Greatest Hits. Because there was no big hit on the record, it is not as well known as her other recordings, but it definitely has charm and is an essential part of her collection of music.

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