August, 24, 2010. Barry Manilow 'Can't Smile Without' Music & Arts Classes in Schools
Barry Manilow has been entertaining audiences for more than 30 years, and the Grammy-winning
performer credits music and arts classes he took in high school for guiding him towards his successful career. Now, schools are in jeopardy of losing these helpful classes, and Barry is asking for your help!
"Because of budgetary problems around the country and [in] the schools, they're cutting music and arts classes, which just about killed me -- I don't know what I would have done without my music classes
when I was growing up," Barry tells ET. "I felt, 'What can I do? I'm just one giddy singer.' So I donate money here and there and that's nice, but I thought maybe I could get the public to help do this."
Barry asks that you contact your local school or even your old high school and ask them what they need: "You know they need a set of drums. You know they need a trumpet. And if you can afford it, just get
them some musical instruments, and if you can't do that, go to my website, Manilow.com, and we'll tell you
how to do it," he says.
Barry is also asking the public to bring any musical instruments that may be collecting dust at home to the lobby of Paris Las Vegas Hotel & Casino, where he performs his regular Vegas show.
"Even if they're a little broken, we'll fix it up, and if they're not, we'll take 'em all and we'll send them out to the schools of Las Vegas, which are desperately in need of musical instruments," says
Barry. "And you'll get a free ticket to my show, too. So, that sounds like a pretty good deal."
For those who can't make it out to Vegas to see him perform, Barry also has a website, Manilow.TV,
where you can catch a retrospective of his live performances.
"I've been videotaping all my shows for 30 years; they were only meant for archives and for me to watch myself," he explains, "and now I'm opening up my archives to the public."
In the spirit of helping young musicians, we asked Barry if he'd be willing to be a judge on "American Idol." He responds that despite the major time commitment required to do a weekly TV show, "I would
love to do it, if I could really help them -- not just be a wise ass and tell them that they stink. If I could really help them like I did on the first couple of shows, and work with them, and see if I can teach them
something, I would love to do that."
August 16, 2010. Barry Manilow croons to fans at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City
ATLANTIC CITY — Go ahead, try not to sing along to a Barry Manilow tune.
From the moment Manilow appeared at the center of the Boardwalk Hall stage, singing his hit "Could It Be Magic" and backed by the 60-piece New York Pops orchestra, the crowd was almost compelled to sing every word.
Manilow came to Boardwalk Hall on Saturday night for a special one-time performance with the New York Pops, presented by Caesars Atlantic City. The sold-out show marked Manilow's first concert this year outside of his
standing gig at the Paris Theatre Las Vegas.
"Hello, Atlantic City!" Manilow shouted to the frantic "fanilows" (the moniker given to Manilow's most loyal fans). "Looks like we've made it!"
For Manilow, those words couldn't be more true. At 67 years old, Manilow still sounds unbelievable. Hitting every note and singing nearly every major hit of his four-decade career, Manilow never stopped moving, except to
occasionally blot the sweat off his face with a towel.
"After 30 years of albums ... give me a break, ya know?" Manilow joked between songs.
The mood for some of Manilow's opening songs seemed a bit campy at first, with dance versions of some of his hits and a giant smiley face in the background for his song "Can't Smile Without You." But the arrangement of
the New York Pops behind Manilow's classics — especially hits like "Daybreak," "I Write the Songs" and "Weekend In New England," made for phenomenal live renditions.
He also sprinkled in a few songs from his latest covers album, "The Greatest Love Songs of All Time." But for the most part, Manilow stuck to his own catalog, each song ending in a grand flourish from the orchestra.
But Manilow really shines when the bright lights and flashy backup dancers leave the stage — and he's behind the piano.
Singing his classic love ballad "Weekend in New England," Manilow's voice soared above the crescendo of violins and drums.
"If you can't get lucky to this one, you're in trouble," Manilow joked.
Manilow also used his rare chance with the orchestra to play a few hits he doesn't usually sing, including "When October Goes," a ballad he wrote based on an incomplete lyric by Johnny Mercer.
"Let's try it and see if I can hit the F sharp," Manilow said. And, he did.
"After all these years, I just never know if there's going to be an audience for me," Manilow said as the crowd cheered. "So thank you so much."
Kicking the night off on a lighter note was Las Vegas entertainer Gordie Brown, who opened for Manilow.
Brown, an impressionist, got the crowd laughing with goofy impersonations of the likes of Neil Diamond and Willie Nelson (mockingly singing "To all the plants I've smoked before"). But Brown's 40-minute set easily could
have done without the tired, cliched impersonations of Elvis Presley and Michael Jackson. That could — and should — have been 20 more minutes for Manilow to sing. Cheap trick again...
The fanilows would have easily made that trade.
August 15, 2010. Barry Manilow shares tips, instruments with Atlantic City High School musicians
ATLANTIC CITY — Barry Manilow bounded into Boardwalk Hall just a few hours before his concert Saturday night to greet some special guests - members of Atlantic City High School's marching
band.
The youngsters were invited to sit in on the Grammy Award-winning vocalist's rehearsal, filling up two rows of floor seats. Before his turn at the microphone, Manilow chatted with the students, telling
them that when he was their age, he would attend shows and watch mesmerized from the audience.
"I sat here like you are and I said, ‘This is what I want to do,'" he told them.
Behind him, the 60-piece New York Pops practiced the concert's opening song. The sounds of strings and drums and brass reverberated through the arena.
"They have been working in the business all of their lives," Manilow said of the professional players. "Maybe that's what you'll end up doing." Some of the students said they dream about becoming musicians
when they're older.
"Mr. Manilow, how do I make it big as a drummer?" asked Ramier Brown, 16, of Atlantic City."Do you read music?" "A little bit," Brown said. "That's the trick. That's the way you make a living. If you can
read, you can work," Manilow advised him. "You can be as talented as you want, but you got to spend a couple of years just diving in and reading it. Then you can find out if you're brilliant."
Demetrius Hart, who graduated from Atlantic City High School in June and played the snare drum in the band, was captivated by the intricacies of the concert. Sound check workers rushed the stage while the
musicians played, the back-up singers grooved and mixing board professionals made sure it all came together. "Is some of this prerecorded?" asked Hart, 17, of Atlantic City. "This whole thing is live," Manilow told him
before rushing up to the stage to practice his entrance.
Besides giving students a chance to see the "Copacabana" crooner up close, Manilow and his charity also donated about 15 instruments to Atlantic City High School for its music program. Started in 2008, the
Manilow Music Project collects money from ticket sales to purchase instruments for public schools. It also collects and repairs used instruments.
Atlantic City High School band director Darryl Robinson said the instruments "come at a great time," as school districts are being squeezed by budget cuts and funding for ancillary programs such as music
are jeopardized. But just the chance for some of the school's band members to witness a legendary performer in action was appreciated, the students said.
"It's an honor to be invited to something this big," said Dominic Marinucci, a 16-year-old trumpet player from Ventnor."We're going to remember this," added Josh Roldan, 15, of Ventnor, who plays tenor
saxophone and wants to study music in college.
Manilow, wearing a button-down shirt and black pants, belted out the final note to a song. The high school students fist-pumped and cheered him on. After more than an hour of watching, they were given
tickets to the night's show - but they wouldn't get to go. They had their own performance.
In a couple of hours, the youngsters would be at Showboat Casino Hotel to play for the Atlantic City High School Class of 1970's 40-year reunion. There, an audience would be clapping for them.
August 9, 2010
BARRY MANILOW INVITES LOCAL MUSIC STUDENTS
BEHIND THE SCENES AT SYMPHONY SHOW
WITH THE NEW YORK POPS IN ATLANTIC CITY!
MANILOW GIVES BACK FOR ATLANTIC CITY BOARDWALK
HALL PERFORMANCE
ON SATURDAY, AUGUST 14
Atlantic City, NJ (August 9, 2010) –Dozens of local music students from the Atlantic City
Unified School District will be attending the rehearsal for Barry Manilow’s Saturday night show
as part of his ongoing commitment to preserving music education. This behind the scenes
glimpse of a professional musician crafting a live show is something Manilow and The Manilow
Music Project (MMP) have generously offered these students throughout the school district.
MMP was formed in response to the needs of public schools and their severely depleted music
programs, and works towards highlighting these programs. Additionally, MMP adds these
programs in the form of donations of instruments and materials to further music education
around the country.
Manilow will be performing with the country’s largest pops orchestra, The New York Pops, at
Atlantic City Boardwalk Hall on Saturday, August 14th for his only east coast appearance this
year. Backed by The New York Pops 60-piece orchestra along with a band and vocalists,
“Caesars Atlantic City Presents Barry Manilow with the New York Pops” will showcase the
icon’s many hits in addition to songs featured on his new album, “The Greatest Love Songs
of All Time.” Opening for Manilow is talk show staple Comedian Gordie Brown and showtime
is 8:00 pm.
“Music has shaped my life and to give these kids a window into what professional musicians
experience is a genuine gift,” says Manilow.
Atlantic City's high school music programs will benefit from Manilow’s show by sharing in the
proceeds of the special Platinum Experience Tickets. Proceeds from Platinum Experience
Tickets go directly to the Manilow Music Project. The Manilow Music Project is part of
Manilow’s non-profit, The Manilow Fund for Health and Hope and will put instruments into the
hands of middle school and high school students in the Atlantic City Unified School District.
Manilow recently began his most celebrated run at the Paris Théâtre at Paris Las Vegas, where
he’ll perform more than 78 shows each year for two years. The shows are produced by
STILETTO Entertainment in conjunction with AEG Live and Paris Las Vegas. All those who
attend the concert at Boardwalk Hall will have the opportunity to win a trip to Paris Las Vegas to
see Manilow’s new show.
Tickets for “Caesars Atlantic City Presents Barry Manilow with the New York Pops” are available
via Ticketmaster.com, Charge by phone 800.745.3000, and at Boardwalk Hall box office.
August 04, 2010
He Writes the Songs
An interview with music icon Barry Manilow
This month, the top adult contemporary artist of all time will leave his home stage at Paris Las Vegas to call on Atlantic City. Barry
Manilow is back in town, playing for one night only with the New York Pops.
For 30 years, Manilow has set the standard for success in pop music. From the early hits—“Mandy,” “Copacabana”—to anthems like “I Write the Songs,” the star has more than justified the
confidence of Frank Sinatra, who anointed him his successor in the 1970s.
Along with his success has come a reputation for being “uncool.” But if loving Barry isn’t cool, neither is Bob Dylan, who once called the lanky singer-songwriter “an inspiration.”
Casino Connection recently asked Manilow about his enduring influence, and his upcoming AC show.
Your CD,
Greatest Love Songs of All Time, includes a baker’s dozen of the greats. Was it tough to choose just 13?
The cream rises to the top. I studied the Encyclopedia of Popular Music in America and listed the titles that seemed to fit. I’m a big fan of classic pop songwriting, so choosing the
songs was really a great experience. I sent my list to Clive Davis, he did some editing, and off we went.
I tried singing and arranging both “I’ve Got A Crush On You” and “Embraceable You,” but I couldn’t make them sound fresh, maybe because these two have been sung so many times.
You’ve made a series of “Greatest” albums—songs of the ’50s, ’60s, etc. Are the ’90s next?
None of us ever considered doing songs from the ’90s. The songs that were becoming hits then were so far away from the style of music I can do: there was a lot of R&B, rap and hip-hop, and maybe one or two
melodic/lyrical songs like “My Heart Will Go On.” It’s not enough to make up an entire CD.
There are talented composers out there, and I think they’re capable of writing great melodies and lyrics, but I think the market won’t allow those kinds of songs to be heard. Really too bad.
Your voice seems to have improved over the years, a la Tony Bennett.
Thank you. I’m a lucky guy. I haven’t changed very many of the keys I sing in, so I’m singing in the same high keys I made the records in 30 years ago. Amazing to me and to my band.
On a rainy Sunday, what CD are you most likely to listen to?
I don’t listen to the pop radio. Never have. My favorite Sunday morning music is always classical or soft (true!) jazz. Not the pretend-jazz they call “smooth.”
Of your own songs, what's your personal favorite?
My favorites are always little-known album cuts. Out of the hits, my favorite would be “Could It Be Magic.”
Do you try to fit all your hits into your stage show?
During our show at Paris Las Vegas, there is a set amount of songs. Many of them are hits. For our one night in Atlantic City, I’ll try to incorporate as many of the hits as I can. The thought of being accompanied by the
New York Pops thrills me. Can’t wait.
July 7, 2010 He writes the songs... Caroline Fontein,Vegas.com
With more than 80 million records sold worldwide and a career spanning more than 35 years,
renowned singer-songwriter Barry Manilow is a music icon. What many people may not
know is that he’s also a successful jingle writer. Early on in his career, he penned songs for brands like Band-Aid (“I am Stuck on Band-Aid ‘cause Band-Aid’s stuck on me”) and State Farm (“Like a good neighbor State
Farm is there”). This is one of the many facts he shares with his audience members in his show at Paris Las Vegas. Guests at the show don’t just get to hear some of Manilow’s greatest hits performed live, they also get a
chance to hear him talk about his life and how he rose to fame as one of the top ranking Adult Contemporary chart artists of all time.
Manilow’s career started when he was just seven years old and learned to play the accordion and piano. While still in his teens, Brooklyn native Manilow attended New York College of Music and
the Julliard School of Music. During that time he also worked in the mailroom at CBS, which led to a lucrative career as a jingle writer. In 1971 Manilow teamed up with Bette Midler and became her music director,
arranger and pianist. The following year, he signed a record deal and in 1975 he released his breakthrough album featuring the No. 1 hit song “Mandy.” The song’s success made Manilow an instant star. Between 1975 and
1983 Manilow had 25 consecutive Top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 including “It’s A Miracle,” “Could It Be Magic,” “I Write the Songs” and “Looks Like We Made It.” He has worked on more than 40 albums throughout his
career as a singer, songwriter, arranger and producer. His most recent album “The Greatest Love Songs of All Time” was released in January 2010. Before opening his show at
Paris in March 2010 Manilow wowed audiences as a headliner at the Las Vegas Hilton for five years.
In his new show, Manilow performs with a live band and four back-up singers and dancers in the intimate 1,500-seat Theatre des Arts at Paris Las Vegas. Directed by stage and film choreographer
and director Jeffrey Hornaday, (“Flashdance, “Chorus Line,” “High School Musical”) the show also features video and other production elements that add to Manilow’s exhilarating performances of songs including “Mandy,”
“New York City Rhythm” and the Grammy Award-winning “Copacabana (At the Copa).” Along with the big production numbers the show has acts that feature just Manilow singing and playing the piano.
“I am so proud to be the guy to introduce all of these songs to you,” says Manilow during the show before taking a seat on the piano and singing “Weekend in New England.” With the spotlight on
him and the piano, guests get a chance to see the performer in his natural element. Another of these moments comes during Manilow’s performance of “I Am Your Child.” Afterwards, he talks about how his grandfather was the
first person in his family to recognize his musical talent. He describes a memory from he was 4 years old and his grandfather took him to a shop where people could make their own records. Manilow recorded the song
“Nature Boy” and plays the same record for the audience.
Guests get another glimpse of Manilow’s past when video clips of his first appearances on “American Bandstand” and “Midnight Special are played on large screens hanging above the stage. The
1975 “Midnight Special” video clip of Manilow performing “Mandy” becomes a live duet for the audience with Manilow seated at a white piano playing and singing the song live along with the video.
Along with his repertoire of hit songs, Manilow performs classic love songs from his new album including George Gershwin’s “Love is Here to Stay” and “Where Do I Begin? (Theme From Love
Story).”
During the show fans don’t just get to hear their favorite songs. The intimate showroom and production elements let them experience Manilow’s music in a way that only Vegas knows how to do.
Hearing the songs is one thing, but seeing Manilow on a Vegas stage will have you thinking “Could It Be Magic?”

Q:What are you trying to achieve with how your music is presented in your new show at Paris?
A. “My main goal is always to make people feel something – joy, hope, nostalgia, inspiration. I am on the stage to amuse, entertain and inspire. I want the audience to forget the real world
for 90 minutes and come with me.
I want my music to always sound current, never to feel like ‘oldies.’ I want my songs to sound timeless. So, my incredible band and the brilliant people that work with me are always on the lookout for how to rearrange my
songs so that they never sound dated, but never lose their honesty.”
What is special about your show in Vegas that people can’t experience if they see you perform in another location?
A. “Jeffery Hornaday and his team worked with me to create a show specifically for the showroom at Paris Las Vegas. We built a show that is romantic, exciting and fits only in the Paris
showroom.”
Do you have a favorite song that you perform in the show?
A. “I love what we’ve done with ‘Copacabana.’ I look forward to it every night. I know the audience isn’t expecting Copa to sound, feel and look like what we’re doing with it. They’re always
surprised.”
You’ve been headlining in Vegas for many years. How has performing in this city changed for you over the years?
A: “I love performing in Las Vegas. The audiences are ready to have a good time. When the lights go down and the show begins, I always feel like I’m walking out to a bunch of dear friends.”
What do you enjoying doing when you are not performing?
A: “Playing with my dogs. Watching the plants and flowers in my greenhouse grow. Being with friends. Sitting in front of my computer and composing and arranging new songs.”
You have many hit songs that can still be heard on the radio today. What do you think is the magic ingredient for creating music that continues to be popular
with old fans and attract new ones?
A: “It’s always about the quality of the writing of the song, not so much about the great technology that engineers can create these days. I think that if you write a great song, the public
will respond to it and always want
to hear it.”
Aside from being an entertainer is there anything else that you’ve always wanted to accomplish?
A: “I’d like to have my music performed on a Broadway stage.”
What inspired you to create your Manilow Fund for Health and Hope Program?
A: “My management company, run by the brilliant Garry Kief, was capable and ready to help me give back. They came up with The Manilow Fund and put together this wonderful idea of concentrating
on the smaller, grassroots
organizations that are always forgotten. We collect funds from the generous fans and the public in many different ways and then we send donations to these small organizations that are struggling to help people.”
How do you continue to stay inspired as both an entertainer and composer?
A: “Music inspires me. It takes me away. It heals me. Nothing in my life has ever come closer to perfection than when the music is right. When it’s over for me I want people to know: ‘The only
proof he needed for the existence of God was music.’”
VEGAS.com asked Manilow some questions posed by our Facebook followers. Here is how Manilow responded.
Do you still love performing the way you did when you first started your career as an entertainer?
A: “Ah, yes! Even more so. I was so terrified when I began, I couldn’t do my best work. Now I’m so grateful for being able to still make music, it’s even more wonderful for me.”
What is your favorite greatest love song of all time and why?
A: My favorite love song of all time is ‘The Folks That Live On The Hill’ by Oscar Hammerstien and Jerome Kern. The music that Kern composed is divine and Hammerstein’s lyric is so moving, it
gets me every time.”
How do you keep the show and your voice fresh after performing so many concerts per week?
A: “The audience makes the show fresh every night.”
July 2, 2010

Summer is here and there’s no need to travel anywhere else with the Entertainment Capital of the World in your own back yard. We have extraordinary things to do right here and topping the must-see list is
the legendary Barry Manilow who performs his spectacular new show at the Paris Las Vegas Hotel & Casino.
After more than 30 years in show business, Barry’s accomplishments are far too many to mention here. He has sold more than 80 million records and has had 25 consecutive Top-40 hits on Billboard between
1975 and 1983. In 1978, five of his albums were simultaneously on the best-selling charts, a feat equaled only by Frank Sinatra, Michael Jackson and Johnny Mathis. Barry remains timeless as he sings the greatest songs of
the fifties, sixties and seventies for a collection of albums, as well as the greatest love songs of all time for another.
Talking with Barry Manilow was very special. He’s warm, caring, funny and down-to-earth. “Even Now,” as my heart savors the memory, I’m “Trying to Get the Feeling Again.” Enjoy getting Up Close and
Personal with the man who writes the songs the whole world sings. “This One’s For You!”
Marsala Rypka: What three words best describe you?
Barry Manilow: Music, it’s the essence of who I am. I’m either performing, arranging, writing, or discussing it. Kindness, which is even more important than music and
gratitude.
MR: What are you passionate about?
BM: The word passionate goes deeper and wider than my little world of music. I’m passionate about helping children become decent human beings. One of the ways of
doing that is by making sure they get a good education and are mentored by great people. In my own small way, I work with principals and teachers around the country to try and keep music classes from being eliminated in
the schools because I believe that music classes do much more than teach kids how to play an instrument; they turn kids into better people.
The Manilow Music Project, which is part of the Manilow Fund for Health and Hope, receives all of the proceeds from the weekly “Platinum Experience” tickets to my shows, which include front row seats, a
pre-show champagne reception, a Meet & Greet and photo with me, and an autographed show program. This benefits the middle and high school students in Las Vegas by providing them with musical instruments, sheet music and
music stands. The Fund also supports grass root charities that don’t get a lot of attention. Music is a great job and it comes from my gut, but when you say the word passion I go to another place.
MR: What three people have profoundly influenced your life?
BM: First Grandma and Grandpa. When you’re young, you believe everything your caretakers tell you. If they tell you you’ll never amount to anything, chances are you
won’t. All my relatives loved me, but Grandma and Grandpa loved me in a way that I felt it in my gut and when a kid feels loved, he can get through anything. I come from “Nowhere Brooklyn,” where we had no money, no
nothing. My grandparents, even my mother, Edna, acted amazed whenever I did anything. ‘Oh my God, he blew his nose.’ It was the greatest thing. I was the greatest human being. And I believed it. I just assumed that
everything I did would work and it did.
Second was my stepfather, Willie Murphy. He came into my life when I was 12 or 13. He was an uneducated truck driver, but the smartest man I’ve ever met. He changed the course of my life. My family knew I
was musical, but because I came from the slums of Williamsburg, Brooklyn, they didn’t know what to do with me. They tried their best to support my musicality by sticking an accordion in my hands when I was 11. When my
mother remarried, the three of us moved into a small apartment and Willie brought with him a little stereo that sounded great to my ears, and a stack of records I had never even dreamed of. Big Band music, Broadway
scores, classical, jazz, great pop singers and arrangers like Nelson Riddle. It changed my life. That stack of records may as well have been a stack of gold. I memorized every note on every album. I tried playing them on
the accordion until they got me a little Spinet piano and I took piano lessons. I don’t know where I would be without Willie. A lot of people I know who have the same talent I do didn’t wind up where I am. Willie and I
are still in touch. He’ll come to see my show and say, ‘You did good kid.’ I feel bad for kids who don’t have a Willie Murphy in their lives. That’s why I’m passionate about helping them.
Another great influence is my friend Linda. She is the kindest person I know. I didn’t learn kindness in Brooklyn; I learned street smarts, I learned how to stand up for myself, go after what I wanted and
how to fight to get a seat on the subway. I came out of Brooklyn at 100 mph, like I was shot out of a cannon. I came bursting out of that world and I met Linda who came from the Midwest where people treated each other
politely. She taught me how to be a real person. I’m grateful she’s in my life.
And Clive Davis. Without Clive, my life would be quite different. With his brilliant, commercial ears, he gave me a career that I never dreamed of — money, success in all public arenas, and an image that
is sometimes hard to carry. It’s because of his genius that I’m here. It’s ironic that Clive found the song “I Write the Songs,” for me, because writing my own songs is the only reason I wanted to be in the music
business. I’m grateful to Clive, though I wish he’d had more faith in my songwriting. Clive is definitely up there at the top of the list.

MR: Did you ever imagine you would have such success?
BM: Never. I was going to be a composer, an arranger, maybe a producer, though I didn’t know what that was. I never aspired to be a performer or singer. I started
writing songs with a friend and they were good songs. They’re still good. When I moved to Manhattan, I learned that you make demos, send them to singers and hope that someone will record them. I did that, but no one was
interested, so I sang the songs myself because I knew the words and it was cheaper than paying someone. I had worked with Bette (Midler) for three years when suddenly I was offered a record contract. When I told my
friends, one of them said, ‘Doing what?’ I said, ‘Singing,’ He said, ‘You don’t sing.’ I said, ‘I do now.’
MR: You started out writing jingles like: “Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there,” and “I am stuck on Band-Aid and a Band-Aid is stuck on me.” Was it scary as
your career took off and you played to larger audiences and received Grammys, Emmys, American Music Awards, and you were inducted into the Songwriter’s Hall of Fame?
BM: Step into your fear and do it anyway is the story of my life. My old friends know I was a pretty brave, young guy to jump into this world I’m in without any
experience and do what I did. I look back and I have to give that young guy a pat on the back. After high school I spent three years at the New York College of Music which became the Julliard School of Music. That was
big because where I come from, there wasn’t one person I knew who went to college. I earned a living during the day in the CBS mailroom; I went to school in the afternoon, and I worked at piano bars at night.
MR: What are you most proud of?
BM: That I still have my feet on the ground. You can get blown over by success. I sometimes think success is more difficult to deal with than failure. I was 29 when
success happened so quickly and powerfully. Before I knew it I had #1 records, people were screaming at concerts, and it knocked me off my feet. I think all of us who have success become assholes for about five years,
and if you’re lucky, you can get through your asshole period and go back to being a regular person. I was on a beach in Florida and I looked up and there was nobody around except the people I was paying. I said, ‘What
happened to me?’ Luckily I put myself back together again and I think I’m still the same guy with the same values that I was before that hurricane of success hit me. When you are famous, you are surrounded by people who
“yes” you to death. That was the most horrifying. They were good people; they just wanted to keep their jobs. I couldn’t find anyone who would tell me the truth. It was the best of times because I had success and the
worst of times because I lost who I was. When you grow up in Brooklyn, you have a built-in bullshit detector. I can spot a phony a mile away. I saw it happening and I kept telling myself it came with the gig. But I knew
the truth. When all of my friends left, I had an epiphany and I knew I had to change. It takes constant work to be authentic, but it’s a big word in my life.
MR: Name something people would be surprised to learn about you?
BM: I record all my music in my studio at home by myself. You’d think I’d need a whole batch of people to help me, but I’ve been taught by some great engineers. I
send the final process out, but I know how to work all the complicated, technical, computerized machinery.
MR: What makes you angry?
BM: People being mean to each other makes me sad. I get angry when people are lazy, when they don’t utilize their talents or live up to their potential of being the
best they can be.
MR: Who would you trade places with for 24 hours?
BM: The singer-songwriters who stood up for their songs and wouldn’t record someone else’s. People like Sting, Paul Simon, and Elton John. Their record companies
couldn’t get them to record cover songs or outside material like I did. They stuck to their guns and recorded what they wrote. I gave in. I’d like to know what my life would feel like had I not given in to Clive and
recorded “Mandy” and continued to write my own songs.
MR: What is your greatest strength and your greatest weakness?
BM: I’m good at teaching people what I’ve learned. Whenever I’ve had that opportunity, like on “American Idol,” or with my band or various orchestras, I think they
like listening to what I have to say. As far as a weakness, I suppose it’s my lack of patience. I blame Brooklyn for making me want things to happen immediately. New Yorkers move and think at a quicker pace. I see people
get confused or frustrated with me because I don’t have the patience to wait for them to understand what I already get. I like working with people like me because we go 100 mph, which can be exhausting for most people.
MR: What was it like working on “American Idol?”
BM: Very rewarding. I watched the first seasons and cheered the kids on, but I’d say to myself, ‘They should be doing it like this, but nobody’s showing them how.’
Then I got a phone call to be on the show and I jumped at the chance. I told the producer I’d only do it if I could work with the kids for a week so I could help them discover what kind of song, what kind of style they
were trying to sing, and who they were singing to. I worked with them for three hours at a time. I drilled Fantasia, Jennifer Hudson, all of them, and asked the same questions I asked myself like, ‘Where are you when you
sing, “Oh Mandy”?’ I wanted them to tell their own story through the lyrics of the song they chose. Then I went home and arranged the songs to suit their style, because that’s one of my strengths. I take songs and flip
them up in the air and change them so the person singing is comfortable. By the time they got on stage, they knew why they were singing the song. Simon said, ‘Wow, what did you do with these kids?’ I did the same thing
the second time. The third time I gave an hour lecture to 150 kids who had made it through the audition process. I said, ‘Get out your pens and paper. Now listen to me. When you sing, don’t close your eyes. Sing to
someone!’ I know I made a difference and I’d love to keep doing that.

MR: What is your most treasured material possession?
BM: If dogs can be considered material possessions, it would be my two Labs. They’re beating hearts with paws, full of unconditional love. Other than that, it would
be a piano. I’ve had a few in my life and it’s always the most precious possession I have.
MR: What is your greatest extravagance?
BM: My only extravagance, and I have Jewish guilt about it, is that I lease a plane to go from Palm Springs to Las Vegas and back. It’s insane, but at the age of 95,
I deserve it.
MR: So Palm Springs is home?
BM: Yeah, a Jew in the desert. I fell in love with the peace and quiet there. There’s so much noise in my life; the musical instruments behind me, an audience in
front of me, airplanes taking off, cars. In Palm Springs there are mountains and sky. I need peace and quiet to hear the answers to the questions I have.
MR: What five people would you invite to dinner?
BM: I’d invite Jesus and ask him if he really existed. I believe that during that time, there were probably many people named Jesus and they all had the same kind of
ideas of one God, being kind to people, and forgiveness — everything our current Jesus is supposed to have spoken about. I would ask if he really walked on water and returned from the dead, if there really was an
Immaculate Conception, and all the rest that people believe today in order to stop everyone from killing one another (which we do anyway).
I’d invite Hitler and ask why he hated me and my family and all of the Jewish people. Why did he do what he did? And then after dinner, I’d kill him.
And I’d invite my musical heroes like Judy Garland. Judy was the world’s greatest entertainer. I’ve always loved singers who also act. Judy was that, so was Sinatra. The greats crawl into the lyrics
they’re singing. When I started, I had to do that. I wasn’t a real singer and I didn’t know shit about performing. My strength isn’t my voice or my looks; it’s that I communicate the story of the song to the audience.
I’d invite Harold Arlen, who wrote over 500 songs including the 1938 classic “Over the Rainbow”, and George Gershwin. They were the greatest composers of the 20th century.
I’d also invite Laura Nyro, one of pop music’s most innovative songwriters.
I’d like to spend an evening with all of them. I’d want them to talk about their experiences, their beliefs, who they were inspired by and share some funny anecdotes. I’d pick songs and ask how they came
about, what made them think of that melody, or how were they able to strip away all their walls and be so honest on stage. Oh, I’d kill for a dinner like that.
MR: What is your show at Paris Las Vegas like?
BM: The reason I’m so excited is because it’s the first time I worked with a team of people to produce a show. All these years I’ve been on the stage, I always
performed in front of my band. I was a guy in concert. At the Hilton I went a little further and created little scenes on the two side stages that took the audience back to Brooklyn or an old nightclub, but most of the
show was in front of my band. This time I brought in Jeffrey Hornaday, who choreographed “A Chorus Line” and “Flashdance.” He staged and directed Madonna and Paul McCartney’s world tours and he’s directing “High School
Musical 4.” We’ve become best friends. He and his team of geniuses took the ideas I wanted to do and gave them back to me in such a beautiful package that the audience leaves stunned. It is the most beautiful show I’ve
ever been involved with. In the past, I would talk about where I came from and then I’d sing “I Am Your Child,” but Jeffrey and his team gave me such beautiful scenes on stage and by the time we get to “Copacabana,” the
stage erupts in gorgeousness. There aren’t many male pop singers who have this kind of production.
MR: You and Bette Midler go way back. You were her musical conductor from 1971–1975. You went on the Divine Miss M tour in 1973. You produced her first hit record
“Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy.” In 2003 you produced “Bette Midler Sings the Rosemary Clooney Songbook” and “Bette Midler Sings the Peggy Lee Songbook” in 2005. You also both performed on the Strip at the same time. What’s
your relationship like?
BM: Bette is the most talented person I’ve ever worked with, and I’ve worked with a lot of people. When I see someone with talent, I feel it’s my duty to support them
in any way I can. That’s how it started with Bette and me. I keep everything and I found an attaché case with the invoices I charged her for “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy” and “Do You Want to Dance”, which were on her first
two albums. It was like $100 for “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy” and $200 for “Friends”, and she’s still using those arrangements today.
MR: How did you and Clive Davis meet?
BM: I was signed with Bell Records, which Clive took over in 1974 and renamed Arista Records. We’d all heard Clive Davis was the genius at Columbia and he was
deciding who to keep on his new label. I was the opening act for Dionne Warwick in Central Park and Clive came backstage, shook my hand and said, ‘Welcome to Arista, Barry.’
I thought I was finished making my second album, but Clive said I needed a hit single. I didn’t know anything about hit singles. I should have, but I was making artistic records. I didn’t pay attention to
the radio, which I thought played commercial junk. As I studied the world Clive wanted me to enter, I put on pop radio for the first time and heard “Kung Fu Fighting” and “Disco Duck.” I thought, ‘These are the kinds of
songs he wants me to record? These people need me.’
Clive sent me a rock n’ roll demo called “Brandy.” I couldn’t believe this was what he wanted me to do after I’d done such beautiful songs like “Could It Be Magic,” which is based on a Chopin prelude! I
didn’t want to sing anyone else’s songs because I was a composer and if there was going to be a hit single, it should be mine. After listening to Scott English sing the demo in this hoarse voice, I went into the closet
and yelled until I was hoarse. Then I recorded “Brandy,” thinking that’s what Clive wanted. When he heard it he said, ‘What’s this?’ I said, ‘It’s “Brandy”.’ He wasn’t very happy so I invited him to listen to an
arrangement I had done earlier that day at the piano where I played the song slower and made the chords prettier. He said, ‘Do that,’ and we changed it from Brandy to Mandy and I think it became the first power ballad
ever. After that there were a million power ballads.
MR: Do a lot of songwriters send you material?
BM: I only record songs Clive has found and said, ‘This is right for Barry,’ or else I’d rather write them myself. Clive is such an incredible genius I trust that
he’s hearing something the audience is going to connect with. I’m terrible at picking hits; they sound like any other song, but if I can figure out a way of arranging and producing it so we both love it, then it has a
chance of becoming a hit.
I worked on “Looks Like We Made It” a long time. People use it at the end of ballgames and graduations because it sounds like a positive song, but it’s about two people who split up. When Clive brought me
“I Write the Songs,” I said, ‘People are going to think I’m bragging about all the songs I write.’ I don’t think he understood because he said, ‘Well you do write songs.’ As expected, every DJ made fun of me. People
don’t listen to the lyrics. The first line of the song is, ‘I’ve been alive forever. And I wrote the very first song,’ so you know I’m not singing about me.
MR: What important life lesson have you learned?
BM: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. If the world did that, there wouldn’t be wars. Fear leads all of us mortals. If love led us, we would abide by
the Golden Rule. It’s what we’re here to work on. It requires a conscious choice because instinctively we go to that place of fear. For a couple of years I lived at the Bodhi Tree Bookstore and I read so many books and
listened to so many tapes and CDs.
MR: Name a few books you love.
BM: “The Course of Miracles.” Books by Wayne Dyer. He came backstage to see me, but it wasn’t the right time to have the kind of talk I wanted to have with him. I’m
friends with Neal Donald Walsh, who wrote all of the “Conversations with God” books. I don’t know how he’s getting this information and I don’t care, they are great books. I came close to living what those books were
teaching. For some reason I stopped and sure enough I became unhappy. I think the only way for me to stay happy is to continually abide by the advice these books offer. I recommend it to everyone.
MR: After all these years reading spiritual books, talking to the geniuses who write them, going to seminars, living at the Bodhi Tree, what have you learned? Do you
believe in God?
BM: I’m still not sure. I like the quote, ‘Something, we know not who, is doing we know not what.’ It’s about as close as I can get to committing to the existence of
God. But it’s the music that affects me so terribly deeply that there are moments in my life when I think, ‘This feels so deep, so different, can it just be fun? Or is it more?’ I’d like my tombstone to read: The only
proof he needed for the existence of God was music.
April 13, 2010 With his second
hit Vegas show, Barry Manilow knows what it takes to make
it in Sin City. With that knowledge, the singer-songwriter says that a couple of his friends would be a big hit there. "I've had this conversation with a lot of my friends.
Rod Stewart would have a ball there, Neil Diamond would have a ball there," Manilow tells Spinner. "I think the
Vegas audiences would embrace them. They're so talented, they've got huge catalogues of music -- they would be perfect for a Vegas show."
Manilow, whose glitz-filled, spectacular new production was directed and choreographed by Jeffery Hornaday, says Stewart and Diamond could just do whatever makes them comfortable and they would still go over big in the
city. "They wouldn't have to do what I'm doing," he says. "I went all the way, but all they'd have to do is get up there and do their show. People would love it."
About to turn 67 this June, Manilow believes his days as a touring artist have likely finished. "I doubt very much if I'll ever tour again. Those days are done for me," he says, though he does add he can see himself
doing one-off shows in different cities. Clearly, after more than three decades on the road, he is ready to leave the traveling life behind and that's why he recommends a similar course for Stewart and Diamond. ''Unless
they love the road, unless they love those hotel rooms, unless they love that plane ride -- and maybe they do -- I recommend it for all of us artists who have been on the road for so many years," he says. "This is such a
great gig for anybody. The stages are the top of the line, you don't have to worry about dressing rooms that are really locker rooms. These theaters in Vegas are top of the line. It's a beautiful way of doing a show."
Are there any young artists he sees that would also fit in Vegas? "No, I think younger artists need to go on the road and develop their show and get their audiences. They've got to pay their dues," he says. "But for the
people who've been on the road many years I think they'd be great here." March 9, 2010. Legendary singer-songwriter Barry Manilow is making music
and magic at Paris Las Vegas with a new resident show. On Saturday, Manilow threw open
the doors to the Paris Théâtre at Paris Las Vegas with a reimagined stage show that is both
more intimate and more exciting than ever before.
Manilow will perform 78 shows each year for two years at Paris Las Vegas. The shows
are produced by AEG Live in conjunction with Paris Las Vegas. Tickets for performances
through July 18, 2010 are currently on-sale.
“The audience in Vegas is always energized and electric, so I know that the Paris Las Vegas
is going to be a special run,” said Manilow. “I’m planning something new for this performance;
definitely not to be missed.”
Directed by renowned stage and film choreographer and director Jeffrey Hornaday
(Flashdance, A Chorus Line, High School Musical), this new show casts Manilow’s hits in a
new light in the intimate and elegant 1,500 seat Paris Théâtre. Including exhilarating new
video elements and all the songs that have made him a pop culture icon over the past 35 years,
the show brings the energy, sincerity and melody of Manilow at his best to a spectacular yet
personal crescendo.
“This is a very special show,” said Director and Co-Creator Jeffrey Hornaday. “Barry has
handcrafted a production that is incredibly personal and nuanced. The result is an original,
moving, and thrilling theatrical experience. For me personally, it has been the most exciting
creative process I've ever participated in.”
With worldwide record sales exceeding 80 million, Barry Manilow is ranked as the top Adult
Contemporary chart artist of all time, according to R&R (Radio & Records); with no less than
25 consecutive top 40 hits to his credit between 1975 and 1983, on the Billboard Hot 100.
Manilow has worked on over 40 albums over the course of his career as a singer, songwriter,
arranger and producer. He recently released “The Greatest Love Songs of All Time,” a new
album chronicling the most touching love songs ever written.
Las Vegas middle school and high school music programs will benefit from Manilow’s new
contract with Paris by sharing in the proceeds of the special, weekly Platinum Experience
Tickets. Platinum Experience Tickets which include a front row seat, pre-show champagne
reception, meet & greet and photo with Barry Manilow, and an autographed show program are
available now at www.ManilowParis.com or at 310.957.5788. Proceeds from Platinum
Experience Tickets go directly to the Manilow Music Project. The Manilow Music Project is part
of Manilow’s non-profit, The Manilow Fund for Health and Hope and will put instruments into
the hands of middle school and high school students in the Las Vegas Unified School District.
Tickets are available on-line at Ticketmaster.com, in person at the Paris Théâtre box office, or
by calling 1.800.745.3000. Ticket prices are $250, $175, $125, and $95. Visit
www.parislasvegas.com for room and ticket packages. For more information on Barry Manilow
at Paris Las Vegas visit www.ManilowParis.com.
AEG Live
AEG Live, the live-entertainment division of Los Angeles-based AEG, is dedicated to all aspects
of live contemporary music performance. AEG Live is comprised of touring, festival, exhibition,
broadcast, merchandise and special event divisions, fifteen regional offices, and thirty state-
of-the-art venues. The company is currently producing tours and productions including Cher at
The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, Supernatural Santana: A Trip Through the Hits at The Joint
at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, Barry Manilow at Paris Las Vegas and Celine Dion
who will return to The Colosseum at Caesars Palace in March 2011. The concert tour roster
includes artists such as Taylor Swift, Bon Jovi, Leonard Cohen, Miley Cyrus, The Black Eyed
Peas, Kelly Clarkson, Wisin & Yandel, Britney Spears, Kenny Chesney, P!nk, Paul McCartney,
KISS, Mo’Nique and American Idols Live. AEG Live is the largest producer of music festivals in
North America from the critically acclaimed Coachella Music & Arts Festival to Stagecoach and
New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. For more information, go to www.aeglive.com.
About Paris Las Vegas
Paris Las Vegas is a Harrah's Entertainment resort. From its dramatic 50-story replica of the
Eiffel Tower to authentic architectural reproductions, Paris Las Vegas features elegant décor,
European-inspired boutiques and a distinctive array of fine cuisine, including Chef Joho's
acclaimed Eiffel Tower Restaurant, Les Artistes Steakhouse and French-bistro Mon Ami Gabi.
The resort celebrates the romance and excitement of the European City of Light. In the heart
of the famous Las Vegas Strip, the passion and sophistication of Paris Las Vegas transports
guests to Europe's most romantic city. March 9, 2010 Manilow gets to the heart of Vegas
By: Leslie Katz
Examiner Staff Writer So far, Barry Manilow appears to be pretty happy in his new home at Paris Las Vegas in the heart of the Strip.
After a successful five-year stint at the Hilton, he made it, as he said during Saturday night’s opening weekend performance, to the “other side of the monorail.”
Designed specifically for the hotel’s relatively intimate 1,500-seat theater, this show is his most cozy and personal ever, pegging to a theme of romance (not to mention tying in with his most recent recording, “The
Greatest Love Songs of All Time”).
Always a consummate showman, Manilow (who co-created this new production with director Jeff Hornaday) again displays his excellent sensibilities in this seamlessly paced, crowd-pleasing act. It offers something for
longtime admirers who have carefully followed his 35-year career and for casual casino-goers who know him as the guy who sings “Copacabana.” (He did, in the closing and most boisterous number, which had fewer ruffles
than did previous incarnations).
Early on, the gem he throws out for “Fanilows” is the up-tempo “I Want To Be Somebody’s Baby,” an obscure but terrific anti-love song off his second album. Another in that vein is the lively “New York City Rhythm,”
featuring fun piano solos by Manilow and multiple keyboard players in his band.
Those tunes provide a nice counterpoint to the ballads for which he’s best known: “Could It Be Magic,” “Somewhere in the Night,” “Weekend in New England” and “Mandy.”
“This One’s For You,” he says, always reminds him of his grandfather, who coaxed his musical abilities when he was young boy.
In a particularly touching moment, he plays a scratchy, old recording he made with his grandfather of himself singing “Nature Boy” when he was around 4, then sings a gorgeous adult version of the tune.
Equally appealing are his covers of classics including “Our Love Is Here To Stay,” “Theme from Love Story” and “Love Me Tender.” Yes, Barry even pulls off an Elvis tune.
Despite a power outage that apparently disrupted rehearsals before the opening, the technical aspects of the show — most notably the supercool high-definition video images of Impressionist masterpieces from Paris — serve
as the perfect complement to the magic of the music.
Of course, in the end, the show is truly about the music. And in typical fashion, Manilow surrounds himself with an impeccable 10-piece band and convivial quartet of backup vocalists/dancers.
So far, Barry Manilow appears to be pretty happy in his new home at Paris Las Vegas in the heart of the Strip.
After a successful five-year stint at the Hilton, he made it, as he said during Saturday night’s opening weekend performance, to the “other side of the monorail.”
Designed specifically for the hotel’s relatively intimate 1,500-seat theater, this show is his most cozy and personal ever, pegging to a theme of romance (not to mention tying in with his most recent recording, “The
Greatest Love Songs of All Time”).
Always a consummate showman, Manilow (who co-created this new production with director Jeff Hornaday) again displays his excellent sensibilities in this seamlessly paced, crowd-pleasing act. It offers something for
longtime admirers who have carefully followed his 35-year career and for casual casino-goers who know him as the guy who sings “Copacabana.” (He did, in the closing and most boisterous number, which had fewer ruffles
than did previous incarnations).
Early on, the gem he throws out for “Fanilows” is the up-tempo “I Want To Be Somebody’s Baby,” an obscure but terrific anti-love song off his second album. Another in that vein is the lively “New York City Rhythm,”
featuring fun piano solos by Manilow and multiple keyboard players in his band.
Those tunes provide a nice counterpoint to the ballads for which he’s best known: “Could It Be Magic,” “Somewhere in the Night,” “Weekend in New England” and “Mandy.”
“This One’s For You,” he says, always reminds him of his grandfather, who coaxed his musical abilities when he was young boy.
In a particularly touching moment, he plays a scratchy, old recording he made with his grandfather of himself singing “Nature Boy” when he was around 4, then sings a gorgeous adult version of the tune.
Equally appealing are his covers of classics including “Our Love Is Here To Stay,” “Theme from Love Story” and “Love Me Tender.” Yes, Barry even pulls off an Elvis tune.
Despite a power outage that apparently disrupted rehearsals before the opening, the technical aspects of the show — most notably the supercool high-definition video images of Impressionist masterpieces from Paris — serve
as the perfect complement to the magic of the music.
Of course, in the end, the show is truly about the music. And in typical fashion, Manilow surrounds himself with an impeccable 10-piece band and convivial quartet of backup vocalists/dancers.
Read more at the San Francisco Examiner:
http://www.sfexaminer.com/entertainment/Manilow-gets-to-the-heart-of-Vegas--87039447.html#ixzz0hf1x4DTl
March 5, 2010 Entertainer says he's excited to bring new show to new, more intimate
venue
Barry Manilow may be the guy in the spotlight, singing his heart out whether he's belting a trademark chart-topper or crooning a vintage tune from his latest album,
"The Greatest Love Songs of All Time." Just because you're watching him, however, doesn't mean he's not watching you.
And Manilow's new show, which opens tonight at Paris Las Vegas, makes it easier for him to watch his audiences than ever before.After five years at the Las Vegas Hilton, Manilow takes the stage at the
Paris Theatre, moving from a showroom designed "for animal acts and elephants" to a "very legit proscenium theater" with "a whole different vibe," he says during a recent telephone interview.
Part of that vibe, he adds, is the inherent intimacy of the Paris theater.
"I can see 'em," Manilow says of the audience. "They're right in my lap -- and so that part is going to be really great."
Manilow makes that prediction from his five years at the Hilton, an experience that gave him "the opportunity to look at this audience" -- and see them in a way he couldn't when he plays big arena shows on
the road, when "big spotlights in my eyes" block the view.At the Hilton, while performing "Copacabana" on a catwalk that stretched over the audience, "I would look down," he recalls, "and what I saw was these people
smiling from ear to ear. Some of them were in wheelchairs, and some of them were older and they were standing -- or, if they were in wheelchairs, trying to stand up -- and smiling and clapping, just cheering and all. And
I said, 'Oh! Is that what I'm doing?' "
Manilow's new Paris show takes its cue not only from its star but its Parisian-flavored setting, he notes.
"Right when we were deciding whether we were actually going to do this," Manilow visited Paris (the real one) and was struck by the City of Love's romantic atmosphere.
"I thought, well, it is also a very romantic theater and the whole vibe is that, too," he says.
Coupled with the romantic theme of Manilow's latest love songs album, "I just kept thinking to myself, what is the goal of performing? And the goal is art, beauty, romance, love -- and music. That's what I
got from Paris -- and that's what I get when I walk in" the Paris' Las Vegas theater.
With a proscenium stage designed for musicals, Manilow's new show will feature "not just big bells and whistles," he says, but "a theater piece. That's what we're heading towards."
The "we" refers to Manilow and co-creator and director Jeffrey Hornaday, whose credits range from movie choreography ("Flashdance," "Dick Tracy") to staging arena tours for the likes of Madonna, Mariah
Carey and Paul McCartney. (Next up for Hornaday: directing the fourth installment of the "High School Musical" franchise.)
Hornaday describes Manilow's Paris show as "more of a hybrid of a singer-songwriter's concert and a Broadway presentation."
In many of the huge arena tours Hornaday has done, "the thing that gets a bit frustrating is, you have to hit people over the head with a hammer for the stuff to read," the director explains. But in the
Paris theater's more intimate setting, "with all of the creative choices you make, you can't hide behind flash."
Overseeing those "rock 'n' roll circus" arena shows, "with most pop stars, I will build a show for them and then put them into it," Hornaday notes.
But because he and Manilow have been working together "every weekend for months," Manilow's been a part of the creative process all along.
"One of the really fun things is, Barry's also a dance arranger," Hornaday says, so for "some of the numbers, we get on the floor with a drummer and Barry and do it the old-school way, like a Broadway
workshop."
Such a collaboration "was really the fascination for me -- the process," the director acknowledges.
Manilow echoes that sentiment, noting "it's very exciting" to build a new show. "I love this part most of all," he says, "creating a brand-new show for a brand-new venue."
The brand-new show features some brand-new technology, Hornaday notes.
"Cutting-edge high-definition video screen technology" will display various images throughout the production, he explains, as when art appears, to tie in with Paris "being synonymous with art and music."
The high-tech visuals will appear only when they add to the production, however, the director maintains.
Otherwise, "we don't need it -- Barry can totally take it," Hornaday says. "It's more about him and the stage and the audience."
And in Manilow's view, that audience falls into two categories.
Longtime "Fanilows" who have followed his music since his '70s and '80s heyday -- when he ruled the charts with smashes from "I Write the Songs" to "Copacabana" -- enjoy hearing less familiar material,
Manilow says.
"But in Vegas, there's tourists, there's conventions -- these are new people who don't know me," he points out. "They don't even know what the hell I'm still doing. And they say, 'Hey, let's catch him
before he croaks.' "
Those audiences are "looking forward to the old war horses -- and I'm happy to do it. They are excited -- and they make me excited" to "find the truth in the song," the singer says.
And, of course, trying to get the feeling again -- the feeling Manilow had during his five-year Hilton run, when "it was a celebration every night."
The venue and the show may be different this time around, but the focus remains the same.
Otherwise, "I don't need to do this," Manilow says. "I don't need any more gold records, I don't need any more applause, I don't need any more money."
What he does need: a chance to sing. And, of course, to see the audience's reaction to the singer and his songs.
"How can I not do that, if I can make people do that?" Manilow says. "So I go back onstage."
January 15, 2010 Barry Manilow to preview new Paris show at Keep Memory Alive gala By Robin Leach -LasVegas
Sun Six days before Barry Manilow launches
his new two-year contract on the Strip, the superstar entertainer will give a sneak preview of the songs and music at the annual Keep Memory Alive gala. The celebrated music legend will perform Feb. 27 for the Cleveland
Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health fundraiser at the Bellagio. The first of his annual 78 performances at the Paris begins March 5.
Manilow follows last year's one-night-only reunion of Siegfried & Roy at Keep Memory Alive. KMA Chairman Larry Ruvo made the announcement yesterday at a downtown
secret summit of hotel owners and executives with Cleveland Clinic doctors who unveiled plans for
Las Vegas to become a "medical mecca" similar to Houston.
"We are deeply touched and appreciative of Manilow's incredible generosity at this crucial time," Ruvo said. "He has personally donated all of the costs associated with the performance. What a fantastic
way to arrive on the Strip, which has been his dream for so many years. His kindness helps us fulfill our dreams, too."
Star chefs Wolfgang Puck and Thomas Keller are teaming up this year for the gala. Other celebrities, including The Sopranos star Steve Schirripa and comedian Brad Garrett, have agreed to join
auctioneer Christian Kolberg and Las Vegas Sun celebrity and entertainment reporter Robin Leach, who will be hosting the event.
In addition to his own foundation, The Manilow Fund for Health and Hope, other work includes The Prince's Trust, United Way, The Starlight Foundation and several leading organizations for AIDS prevention
and research. He is the national spokesman for The Foundation Fighting Blindness and a member of the Music Center of Los Angeles. He also created the Manilow Music Project as part of his Manilow Fund for Health and Hope
to help head off budget cuts to arts and music programs in schools. His foundation gave $500,000 in musical instruments, sheet music and music stands to 21 schools in California's Coachella Valley.
When he opens here at the Paris days after the KMA gala, he has promised to make music donations to Las Vegas Valley schools and already has begun identifying schools and programs with those needs.
"Just call your local schools and ask them what they need," Manilow said. "Get 'em a new set of drums! Anyone can make a difference. Music changes a young person's life."
Manilow wrapped his four-year run at the Las Hilton last month. He performed to sell-out crowds beginning in 2005 with his Manilow: Music & Passion and then expanded it to Ultimate Manilow:
The Hits in September 2008.
In addition to the preview of his all-new production, Manilow will feature material from his new album The Greatest Love Songs of All Time, which will be released Jan. 29. He will unveil the album
live on QVC on a satellite feed Tuesday from the Paris. During the special QSessions Live broadcast, the Grammy-, Tony- and Emmy-winning artist will perform a selection of songs from the album and give viewers
an inside look at the inspiration behind the collection. Manilow also will offer shoppers the opportunity to purchase a week before the album release a five-track bonus disc of songs he put together especially for QVC
viewers.
Teaming up once again with longtime collaborator and Arista Records founder Clive Davis, now chief creative officer of Sony Music Entertainment, the album features Manilow's interpretations and
arrangements of classic love songs, including "Love Is Here to Stay," "The Look of Love" and "I Can't Give You Anything But Love." Manilow's 2006 QVC appearance marked the highest single-day sales by a music artist in
QVC's history, and he still holds the record as the highest single-hour music sales event in QVC's 23-year history.
"I unabashedly can say that this CD is the most beautiful album I've ever made," Manilow said. "Everyone involved in creating this one was committed to making the most romantic album possible. It's a real
beauty. I've always loved this style of music. Given the opportunity to make an album of songs like these was an honor and a rich creative experience for me. I hope the songwriters would have been proud of how we treated
their masterpieces.
"The final cut of the CD is very special. It's a song called 'When You Were Sweet Sixteen.' In my research, I found that this song was the very first pop love song ever written. It was written in 1898, and
many versions of it have been done. When you hear it, I think you'll understand why it still holds up over a hundred years later."
As the founder and president of Arista Records for its first 25 years, Clive was a perennial collaborator with Manilow on virtually all of his recordings. They first worked together on "Mandy," Manilow's
debut No. 1 single, after he became the first performer signed by Clive when Arista was launched in 1974.
Although it was back in June 2002 that he was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame alongside Michael Jackson, Randy Newman and Sting, Manilow still says the highlight of his long and successful
career will be headlining on the Las Vegas Strip.
"I am delighted to be in Vegas," he said. "That was always my dream, and now I am very happy with the show we will be opening at the Paris. It is a pleasure to share its magic in advance with the
supporters of Keep Memory Alive
January 12, 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
BARRY MANILOW DEBUTS GREATEST LOVE SONGS ON QVC
Legendary Performer to Debut THE GREATEST LOVE SONGS OF ALL TIME
With Special QVC Performance Live from Paris Hotel in Las Vegas
West Chester, PA (January 12, 2010) – J’adore Paree! Live from Paris Las Vegas, Barry
Manilow is scheduled to return to QVC on Tuesday, January 19 at 9 PM (ET) to unveil
his much-anticipated new album, THE GREATEST LOVE SONGS OF ALL TIME (Arista).
During the special QVC Presents QSessions Live broadcast, the Grammy-, Tony-, and
Emmy Award-winning artist will perform a selection of songs from the new album while
offering viewers an inside look at the inspiration behind the collection. Manilow will also
offer shoppers the opportunity to purchase a five-track bonus disc of songs he put together
especially for QVC viewers, a week before street date.
“Barry Manilow continues to be a favorite among our viewers,” said Rich Yoegel, director
of merchandising for QVC. “Performing his brand-new songs live from Las Vegas, this
show promises to be one that no one will want to miss.”
Teaming up, once again, with longtime collaborator and Arista Records founder Clive Davis
(now Chief Creative Officer, Sony Music Entertainment), Manilow’s THE GREATEST LOVE
SONGS OF ALL TIME features his loving interpretations and arrangements of classic love
songs, including “Love is Here To Stay,” “The Look of Love,” and “I Can’t Give You Anything
But Love.”
Manilow, whose 2006 QVC appearance marked the highest single-day sales by a musical
artist in QVC history, also continues to hold the record as the highest single-hour music
sales event in QVC's 23 years.
THE GREATEST LOVE SONGS OF ALL TIME will be available starting January 19
through QVC at 800.345.1515 or www.qvc.com while supplies last.
December 19, 2009.
5 Christmas songs (that make the whole world sing!)
Barry Manilow shares why he loves this season so much.
Plus, the top adult-contemporary recording artist of all time picks his favorite holiday tunes.
rowing up in a poor household in Brooklyn, N.Y., Barry Manilow never had a bunch of gifts waiting to be unwrapped around his family's aluminum Christmas tree that was adorned with blue tinsel
and ornaments. There was no need for them: For him, the real presents were the Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra and other big-band Christmas albums that his stepfather would bring home around the holiday season.
To this day, those two aspects -- family and great tunes -- remain Manilow's Christmas traditions. "I love the season because it's the only time of the year when everybody stops yelling at
each other for a couple of weeks," says Manilow, who begins a headlining stint at the Paris Las Vegas hotel March 5. "Things calm down, people are all concerned about giving, charity and spirituality, and it's just a
lovely time of the year."
Manilow, the top adult-contemporary artist of all time, has shown his love for the Christmas tunes his Irish stepdad and Russian/Jewish mother enjoyed both on his records and in performance.
He has released three holiday albums since 1990 -- the most recent is October's "In the Swing of Christmas" -- and his "Happy Holiday!" DVD came out last month. In the spirit of the season, Manilow gives us his five
holiday favorites:
The Christmas Waltz
"Frosted windowpanes" and "painted candy canes" set the scene for this musical Christmas card from the big city, and they come alive thanks to the sweet croon of Frank Sinatra. "One of the most beautiful Christmas songs
ever written, done by the greatest male singer of all time," Manilow says.
The Christmas Song
Perhaps no yuletide-ready song is as vividly wintry as this Mel Torme track, with chestnuts roasting on an open fire, Jack Frost nipping at your nose and folks dressed up like Eskimos.
It has been sung -- many times, many ways -- but none as popular as Nat King Cole's 1946 recording, which became "the definitive version of this romantic song."
Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas
It's one of the most performed holiday songs, but many people don't realize there have been several different versions. Sinatra made it a seasonal classic in the late 1950s, but Ol' Blue Eyes had tweaked the original --
made famous by Judy Garland in the 1944 movie musical "Meet Me in St. Louis" -- to make the lyrics a little less melancholy. Yet it's Garland's take that Manilow thinks is "the greatest rendition of this holiday song
ever."
Silver Bells
Silver Bells first appeared in the Bob Hope film "The Lemon Drop Kid" in 1951, and even though Bing Crosby's early-'50s version with Carol Richards is the standard, this popular tune has been covered by everybody from
the animated Alvin and the Chipmunks to Kenny Rogers to Twisted Sister to Broadway star Kristin Chenoweth. Manilow recorded his own take -- singing all of the harmonies himself -- on his recent album "In the Swing of
Christmas."
"I had a ball doing all 21 voices on this holiday classic," he says.
Happy Holiday/White Christmas
Bing Crosby debuted Irving Berlin's White Christmas in December 1941, and over the years it has become one of the most beloved songs of all time -- Christmas or otherwise. For Manilow's second seasonal album, 2002's "A
Christmas Gift of Love," the crooner doubled the Christmas spirit by pairing White Christmas with another Berlin classic, "Happy Holiday." "It's the most joyful rendition of these great Irving Berlin songs I could come
up with," he says.
"I dare you not to smile."
December 19, 2009.
Barry Manilow delivers a Christmas-cabana
The late, great impresario Ed Sullivan would have summed up Barry Manilow’s holiday tour as only Sullivan could: “Ladies and gentlemen, we’ve got a really big shew tonight.”
Truth be told, Manilow, who opened a three-night concert gig at the Rosemont Theatre on Thursday night, has been doing really big shows for most of his four-decade career: The kitschy, campy,
pull-out-all-the-stops arena tours of his ’80s heyday; the big, bold, brassy scaled-back theater tours of the ’90s; the Las Vegas showroom extravaganza of the new millennium (first at the off-Strip Las Vegas Hilton, and
starting in March at the Strip-centric Paris Resort & Casino). Rolling Stone years ago called Manilow “the showman of our generation.” They were on to something.
The holiday show/greatest hits hybrid that Manilow presented at the Rosemont, accompanied by a 50-piece orchestra and four backup singers, boasted everything from Christmas trees and twinkling
lights to Santa Claus and tiny caroling moppets (the Evanston Children’s Choir on this night), even a shower of confetti “snow.” (Maybe he’s saving the 10 lords-a-leaping for the last two shows.)
Was this the best Manilow concert I’ve ever been to? No. Was it everything you’d expect from a Manilow show? You bet. A heaping helping of pure, unadulterated feel-good,
wish-this-show-could-go-on-for-two-hours-more entertainment from the master showman.
And what’s wrong with that?
Looking very holiday-ish and dapper in a Christmas-red jacket, black pants and black shirt, the 66-year-old entertainer kicked things off with his signature duo of “Happy Holidays”/“White
Christmas.” “Consider me your skinny, Jewish Santa Claus!” he proclaimed. And despite a sound system that left his vocals tinny and almost inaudible for the first 10 minutes or so of the program, he was determined to
bestow the Christmas spirit on the 4,500 patrons, whether they wanted some or not. He pretty much succeeded, judging by the ovations.
Manilow peppered the warm-and-fuzzy holiday tunes with a smattering of his greatest hits, including a medley of “Daybreak,” “Somewhere in the Night” “This One’s for You.” As the evening
progressed, Irving Berlin’s “I’ve Got my Love to Keep Me Warm” and Joni Mitchell’s “River” held court with “Weekend in New England” and “Copacabana.” And when Manilow screwed up those famous opening piano chords of the
aforementioned “Weekend,” he just took it in stride, and like a nervous kid at a piano recital, he uttered that most famous of gaffe summations: “Oops!” He had the audience in the palm of his hands for the rest of the
night.
When Manilow settled in at the grand piano and set in motion a gorgeous rendition of “Mandy” it reminded us of what he was capable of. His passion for every note, and the musicians who bring
them to life, has been evident on every album he’s released since that song hit the charts. He was absolutely in his element throughout the concert as the orchestra delivered everything from jazz and pop to swing and big
band.
The tight 70-minute show went along at a brisk pace (that’s the Vegas mentality for ya), and ended almost too abruptly with “Because of Christmas,” which felt like more like a lead-in to an
intermission than an exit tune. The audience didn’t know whether to head for their cars or the lobby bar.
Manilow’s legacy to pop music will be way more than the camp of “Copacabana” or the goofiness of “Can’t Smile Without You.” It goes way deeper than that. “That’s why I write the hits, because
I want the stuff I care deeply about to get out there,” Manilow said in a 1983 Playgirl interview.
“The stuff” for him is and always has been the music. Listen to the gorgeous strains of “Even Now,” (one of the most beautiful ballads you’ll ever hear) and the anguish of the lyrics that come
through as hauntingly as the notes that carry them. And who else could craft a willowy pop song around Chopin’s Prelude in C Minor (the mega-hit “Could it Be Magic”) and get away with it, not because it’s a gimmick but
because the arrangement is a stunning homage to the classical composer? And what of Manilow the composer? He’s in the Songwriters Hall of Fame — right alongside the likes of Leonard Bernstein, Cole Porter, Kurt Weil,
Stephen Sondheim, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Irving Berlin and Joni Mitchell.
In a 2004 interview, after Manilow made a guest appearance on “American Idol,” I asked him if he was “cool again.”
“I’ve always been cool,” he replied with a chuckle.
I’m thinking more folks than let on really do think his music is cool. In this digital music age, I would offer a guess that more than a few of you are right now secretly packing Manilow tunes
on your iPods, where no one will ever know or listen to them but you, maybe as you’re jogging along the lakefront, or walking your dog, or working out, or watching Chicago race by the window on your L train.
Don’t worry, your secret’s safe with me.
December 18, 2009 Barry Manilow at Rosemont Theatre With Christmas but a week
away, singer Barry Manilow, who's maintained a
residency at the Las Vegas Hilton for the past five years, sounded more drawn to the North Pole than the Vegas Strip. The singer's 70-minute concert at a crowded Rosemont Theatre featured a full orchestra decked out in
Santa hats, white confetti falling from the rafters like snow and even a Santa-led conga line during the obligatory performance of "Copacabana."
Manilow opened Thursday's show -- the first in a three-night stand that ends Saturday -- with a casual "Happy Holiday/White Christmas" before easing into "(There's No Place Like) Home for the Holidays." The seasonal
material proved a good fit for the singer, whose appeal rests, at least in part, on his refusal to shift with the times. In many ways, Manilow's songs function as musical comfort food, akin to that family meatloaf recipe
that's gone unchanged for three-plus decades.
"Some people ask if I get tired of singing this one," he said introducing "Mandy." "Of course not." And, aside from some slight weathering in Manilow's voice, the song likely sounded much like it did in 1974, building
from a lonely piano ballad to a grandly-orchestrated finish.
Trim and sporting blonde highlights, the 64-year-old came across like a combination between a Vegas crooner and a Borscht Belt comedian. After flubbing a chord he cracked, "They ain't making pianos like they used to."
And when an audience member interrupted "Weekend in New England" (Manilow (singing): "When can I touch you?" Unknown Woman: "Right NOW!") the singer delivered a bug-eyed double-take worthy of a Marx Brother.
Sure, there were times Manilow embraced a level of schmaltz that would make even a greeting card writer blush (just scan the lyrics to "Looks Like We Made It"). And his decision to rework
Joni Mitchell's intimate "River" into a full-fledged
showstopper was dubious at best (though it went hand-in-hand with his tendency to reach for that big, emotional climax on every tune -- a move since adopted by each "American Idol" contestant). But credit the unrepentant
cornball with giving the audience exactly what it wanted, alongside a handful of holiday treats. December 15, 2009
Barry Manilow's McCallum Theatre concerts raise $464,750 for charities
Barry Manilow's five-night “A Gift Of Love” has translated into a season full of Christmas presents for local charities.The series of benefit concerts
last week at the McCallum Theatre raised $464,750 for 25 Coachella Valley charities, Manilow's manager, Garry Kief, announced Monday.
That's just less than Manilow's goal of $500,000 for local charities. But McCallum board chairman Harold Matzner, who helped advertise the five concerts, called the
fundraising total “amazing.”
“These are good people, Garry Kief and Barry Manilow,” he said. “They've got no agenda except to help people. That's a lot of work, a lot of energy, a lot of
commitment, a lot of planning. Five shows and they were outstanding shows. They did a terrific job.”
The concerts sold out all five nights, including two weekend shows that faced some of the toughest entertainment competition of the season.
Each charity received a different amount of money because concertgoers were allowed to designate a portion of the $750 and $1,000 premium tickets to the charities of
their choice.
Manilow's Music Project received the most money with $25,000 to be used to provide instruments for Coachella Valley students.
The Desert AIDS Project received $24,000, Temple Isaiah received $23,000, and Animal Samaritans got $22,250.
Manilow said in a statement, “At this time of the year, I couldn't be happier to give back to this community that I love so much.”
Charity beneficiaries
ACT for MS: $13,500
Angel View Crippled Children's Foundation: $18,750
Animal Samaritans: $22,250
Barbara Sinatra Children's Center: $16,500
Big Brothers Big Sisters: $15,000
Boys & Girls Club of the Coachella Valley: $13,000
Desert AIDS Project: $24,000
Desert Arc: $13,000
Desert Paws: $13,000
Desert Samaritans for the Elderly: $16,000
FIND Food Bank, Inc.: $17,500
Gilda's Club Desert Cities California: $16,750
Guide Dogs of the Desert: $19,750
Healthy Family Foundation: The Ophelia Project: $12,500
Joslyn Senior Center: $15,000
Manilow Music Project: $25,000
Mourning Star Center: $13,000
Olive Crest: $15,500
One Heartland: $12,500
Pegasus Riding Academy for the Handicapped: $15,000
Shelter From The Storm: $12,500
Stroke Recovery Center: $17,750
Temple Isaiah Fund: $23,000
The Living Desert: $13,500
United Cerebral Palsy — Inland Empire: $15,000
Variety Club of the Desert: $12,500
None Selected: $43,000
December 13, 2009 Before I say this, allow me to state my credentials: I've lived full-time in the desert for
30 years, attended nearly 2,000 charity events and have seen at least 100 live performances at the McCallum Theatre. And I say: Last week's “Gift of Love” Christmas benefit
by Barry Manilow at the McCallum was the best live concert I've ever seen.
Nothing was spared. Manilow performed with a superior 24-piece orchestra, polished backup singers and dancers, spectacular lighting effects and ingenious mobile props.
He ended with a dazzling snowflake confetti drop on the audience.
The nearly two-hour show opened with a mind-bending performance by Manilow's fellow Las Vegas headliner “The Mentalist” Gary McCambridge.
Then Manilow entered singing, “Happy Holidays” but was interrupted by a standing ovation on the fourth word he sang. It turned out to be the first of six.
The second was inspired by Manilow's double-hit whammy “Somewhere In The Night,” which was nearly drowned out by screams, shouts and squeals, and “This One's For You.”
About four songs later, his desert-loving neighbors leaped to their feet again after “Mandy,” “Can't Smile Without You” and “Even Now.” (Standing ovation No. 3.)
Moments later, a woman in the rear audience called out: “I love you Barry.”
Manilow grinned, paused and then looked quizzically at the audience asking: “Any more?”
Yep, you guessed it — standing ovation No. 4.
Late in the show, “I Write The Songs,” complete with a thousand swaying glow sticks held aloft, inspired standing ovation No. 5.
Serious moment
Every aspect of the show was beautifully balanced between Christmas songs and Manilow's signature hits and also between comedy and today's stark realities.
Many locals remember Manilow's outspoken outrage when state budget cuts eliminated music classes for thousands of local students, but few knew the full extent of his response.
After contacting virtually every major musical instrument company in the country, Manilow successfully delivered five semi-truckloads — every single instrument needed — to restore music to the
lives of 1,000 local students.
Seven of those students, along with Palm Springs High School's music director Brian Ingelson, joined him for a song on stage.
Manilow's plea to the audience: “Join me. Do the same. Share your old instruments with the schools, share your food with the hungry, donate to our charities. We must get through this together.”
Then he added, “Someone asked me how I could do something as complicated as this, and I said, ‘How could I not?'”
That brought standing ovation No. 6, the longest of all.
Betty Francis manages the society pages. December 11, 2009
Barry Manilow discusses his ‘new beautiful show’ at the Paris
Award-winning singer-songwriter Barry Manilow says the past five years of playing in Las
Vegas at the Hilton were the best of his career. He didn’t want to leave town when his contract expired, and he’d always had a dream to play on the Strip. Both wishes come true when he opens at the Paris in March with a
new extended deal.
Said 66-year-old Barry: “I am so excited to take my brand new show to Paris Las Vegas. This is the first time I have ever been on the Strip, and we’re putting together a brand new beautiful show. I thought
the Paris Las Vegas, what’s more romantic than that, so we are putting together the most beautiful show I can imagine. I will be singing as many of the hits, of course, as I can and loads of new songs. I hope everyone
can make it there, because I think it’s going to be really great.”
He’s working with Madonna and Paul McCartney’s director/choreographer Jeff Hornaday, who staged their world tours and High School Musical. The 1,500-seat Theatre des Arts will undergo changes for
Barry’s shows. He’s bringing his singers from the Hilton and plans to expand his band in the new location.
“It was time for a change, and moving to the Strip is like being in Times Square,” Barry added. “I’ve checked out the theater already, and I love the room.” Barry is the first artist contracted for a show
run there since the Mel Brooks musical The Producers closed there in February last year.
The mega-best-selling entertainer is already underway with rehearsals for the new production at the same time he is finishing his new album Greatest Love Songs of All Time set for release Jan. 26.
It comes right on the heels of his just-released Christmas album -- his third -- In the Swing of Christmas. Recording magic in the studio enabled his voice to be duplicated many times over to become a 21-piece
choir!
Some of the “greatest love songs’ will be the backbone of his new show. “It’s going to be romantic,” Barry said. “Paris is a romantic city, so the Paris hotel has to reflect the love. I want this to be the
most beautiful production of my career.”
His shows at the Paris will be less than 250 yards from the Caesars Palace Colosseum, where Bette Midler is ending her contract run next month. Barry was her pianist and music arranger when she first found
stardom at the Continental Baths in Manhattan several decades ago. I’ve known Barry since then, when he taught piano for extra money to supplement his early beginnings as a jingles and TV commercials writer.
I interviewed Barry back in May, when he first discussed staying in Las Vegas at the end
of his Hilton contract run. Not only that, but he won’t be commuting back and forth from his Palm Springs, Calif., estate while he’s in Las Vegas. He’s decided to stay put at the Paris while performing there.
Barry has included his own renditions of “The Look of Love” by Burt Bacharach, “We’ve Only Just Begun” by The Carpenters and “12th of Never” by Johnny Mathis on the album, which features jazz and American
standards. “As Time Goes By” from the classic Casablanca and the theme from Love Story also are among the 15 fantastic love songs.
It’s still difficult for me to believe that Barry debuted back in 1974 with his first No. 1 single “Mandy” and went onto an extraordinary career of Grammy, Tony and Emmy wins. He’s racked up worldwide
record sales approaching 100 million, with 25 consecutive Top 40 hits as the top Adult Contemporary artist of all time.
Arista Records mogul Clive Davis, Barry’s longtime collaborator, commented: “Barry and I have a mission to bring a new generation the great songs that are the soundtrack of our lives. This album does just
that, and Barry is sounding better than ever.”
You’ll get a taste of the new album and a glimpse at his new show tonight when Barry joins Jay Leno for an appearance on Jay’s NBC primetime show.
December 8 2009.
Barry Manilow Chooses “The Greatest Love Songs Of All Time”
By
Kevin Richards
Song-belter Barry Manilow has hooked up with music mogul Clive Davis for a new studio album, titled The Greatest Love Songs Of All Time, which is due
January 26 on Arista Records. Produced with Michael Lloyd (who did the Dirty Dancing soundtrack), the album “presents loving interpretations and arrangements of classic, nostalgic
love songs for the Manilow and music fan alike,” and draws its material from movie soundtracks, Broadway, jazz, and American standards
So what are the greatest love songs of all time? There’s “As Time Goes By” (originally written by Herman Hupfeld for the Broadway musical Everybody’s Welcome and re-introduced in the film
classic Casablanca), Irving Berlin’s ”How Deep Is The Ocean,” “You Made Me Love You” (written by James V. Monaco), George Gershwin’s “I’ve Got A Crush On You,” Fats Waller’s “I
Can’t Give You Anything But Love,” “The Shadow of Your Smile” (written by Johnny Mandel), “When You Were Sixteen” (written by James Thornton and revived and popularized by Al Jolsen in 1929), “The Theme From Love Story
(Where Do I Begin)” (written by Francis Lai), “Nevertheless, I’m In Love With You” (written by Harry Ruby), Gershwin’s “Our Love is Here To Stay,” Johnny Mercer’s “Fools Rush In,” and “It Could Happen To You” (written by
Johnny Burke and Jimmy Van Heusen).
Manilow also works his magic on “The Look Of Love” (written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David), “We’ve Only Just Begun” (Written by the songwriting team of Roger Nichols and Paul Williams), and
“The Twelfth of Never” (written by Jerry Livingston and Paul Francis Webster).
“The real joy in creating this album was taking these classic songs that everyone knows and using my chops as an arranger to deconstruct then recreate them to make them my own,” explains the
Grammy, Tony, and Emmy-winning artist.
Says Clive Davis: “Barry and I have a mission to bring to a new generation the great songs that are the soundtrack of our lives. This album does just that and Barry is sounding better than
ever.”
Clive Davis has collaborated with Barry on virtually all his recordings. In 1974, Manilow was the first signing to Davis’ Arista Records; Davis helped him score a #1 with his debut single,
“Mandy.” The Greatest Love Songs Of All Time is the latest in a series the pair have cooked up since 2006 (The Greatest Songs Of The Fifties
through 2008’s The Greatest Songs Of The Eighties.)
We anxiously await Manilow’s Greatest Songs Of The 00’s.
Here’s the track list for Love Songs.
1. As Time Goes By
2. How Deep Is The Ocean?
3. You Made Me Love You
4. We’ve Only Just Begun
5. The Twelfth Of Never
6. I’ve Got A Crush On You
7. I Can’t Give You Anything But Love
8. The Shadow Of Your Smile
9. When You Were Sweet Sixteen (1898)
10. The Look Of Love
11. Theme From Love Story (Where Do I Begin)
12. Nevertheless (I’m In Love With You)
13. Our Love is Here To Stay
14. Fools Rush In
15. It Could Happen To You
16. I Only Have Eyes for You
December 4, 2009.
article by;Steve Baltin,www.spinner.com
Barry Manilow is the biggest selling adult contemporary artist of all time and one of this decade's comeback kids with a string of No. 1 albums 30
years after he was one of the most familiar faces of the '70s. It turns out that no one is more surprised by this than Manilow himself.
"I never even thought Barry Manilow would have one album. I never thought in my life that I would have this career," the incredibly modest superstar tells Spinner. "I thought maybe if I were lucky I would be a songwriter
or a musician or maybe an arranger or maybe a producer, like I did for Bette Midler and so many of the other singers that I worked with. But as a soloist, as a
performer? No, never in my wildest dreams would I have ever thought this would be where I wound up."
Where Manilow has ended up is back in Las Vegas. The singer will begin a new two-year residency at the Paris Las Vegas on March 5, 2010, conveniently coinciding with the release of his 'Greatest Love Songs of All Time'
album. As one would expect from the mix of Paris, love songs and Manilow, he promises a lot of romance. "I got the greatest love songs, Paris, the most romantic city and this gorgeous room in Vegas, so what I put
together with this guy named Jeffery Hornady, who's a wonderful producer/director, is a beautiful, beautiful show," he says. "Every day we get together and the show becomes more and more beautiful. I think it's going to
be one of my favorite productions."
While the love songs will be a part of the show, all of the Manilow standards will still make their presence felt. "It's all the classics, as many as I can, because we're talking about Las Vegas and these audiences
really want to hear the hits," he says. "Certainly I would never take out things like 'Mandy, ' I Write the Songs,' 'Copacabana.'"
We know Manilow is a worthy addition to the rich Vegas legacy, the town made famous by the likes of the Rat Pack -- Sinatra,Sammy, Dean, etc. Is there anybody that he looks to in building a Vegas show? "I do my own
thing. I just have to do what feels good for me," Manilow says. "The greats, well, they are the greats. I couldn't even come close to Sinatra, to Judy, to Elvis, I put them up on a pedestal and that's them."
December 1 2009.
BARRY MANILOW BRINGS NEW SHOW TO PARIS LAS VEGAS
Celebrated music legend signs two-year deal with Paris Las Vegas and AEG Live
Dec. 1, 2009 (LAS VEGAS) – Legendary singer-songwriter Barry Manilow is making music
and magic at Paris Las Vegas with a new resident show. On March 5, 2010 Manilow will
throw open the doors to the Paris Théâtre at Paris Las Vegas with a reimagined stage show
that will be both more intimate and more exciting than ever before.
Manilow will perform 78 shows each year for two years at Paris Las Vegas. The shows are
produced by AEG Live in conjunction with Paris Las Vegas. Tickets for performances March
5 through July 18, 2010 are on-sale today at 10a.m. EST.
Directed by renowned stage and film choreographer and director Jeffrey Hornaday
(Flashdance, A Chorus Line, High School Musical), this new show will cast Manilow’s hits in
a new light in the intimate and elegant 1,500 seat Paris Théâtre. Including all the songs that
have made him a pop culture icon over the past 35 years, the show will bring the energy,
sincerity and melody of Manilow at his best to a spectacular yet personal crescendo.
“The audience in Vegas is always energized and electric, so I know that the Paris Las Vegas
is going to be a special run,” said Manilow. “I’m planning something new for this performance;
definitely not to be missed.”
With worldwide record sales exceeding 80 million, Barry Manilow is ranked as the top Adult
Contemporary chart artist of all time, according to R&R (Radio & Records); with no less than
25 consecutive top 40 hits to his credit between 1975 and 1983, on the Billboard Hot 100.
Manilow has worked on over 40 albums over the course of his career as a singer, songwriter,
arranger and producer. He recently released “In the Swing of Christmas” his third collection
of holiday songs and will release “The Greatest Love Songs of All Time,” a new album
chronicling the most touching love songs ever written on January 26th, 2010.
“Barry Manilow is an icon to generations of adoring fans, “said John Meglen, co-CEO and
President of AEG Live/Concerts West. “AEG Live is privileged to be working with him to bring
this new and exciting musical production to the stage in Las Vegas.”
“At Paris Las Vegas, romance blends with excitement and energy, so it’s only fitting that
Barry Manilow reignite our entertainment offerings,” said Marilyn Winn, President of Paris
Las Vegas. “We invite all of our guests to spend a dynamic evening with Barry Manilow at
Paris Las Vegas.”
Las Vegas middle school and high school music programs will benefit from Manilow’s new
contract with Paris by sharing in the proceeds of the special, weekly Platinum Experience
Tickets. Platinum Experience Tickets which include a front row seat, pre-show champagne
reception, meet & greet and photo with Barry Manilow, and an autographed show program
are available now at www.ManilowParis.com or at 310.957.5788. Proceeds from Platinum
Experience Tickets go directly to the Manilow Music Project. The Manilow Music Project is
part of Manilow’s non-profit, The Manilow Fund for Health and Hope and will put instruments
into the hands of middle school and high school students in the Las Vegas Unified School
District.
Tickets go on-sale today at 10 a.m. EST and are available on-line at Ticketmaster.com, in
person at the Paris Théâtre box office, or by calling 1.800.745.3000. Ticket prices are $250,
$175, $125, and $95. Visit www.parislasvegas.com for room and ticket packages. For
more information on Barry Manilow at Paris Las Vegas visit www.ManilowParis.com.
AEG Live
AEG Live, the live-entertainment division of Los Angeles based AEG is dedicated to all
aspects of live contemporary music performance, touring for a variety of programming and
multi-media production. One of the largest concert promotion and touring companies in
the world, AEG Live is comprised of special event, broadcast and exhibition divisions, and
operates and owns numerous state of the art venues nationwide. Recent AEG Live tours
and productions include Celine Dion A New Day…, which just ended a landmark five year
run, Bette Midler The Showgirl Must Go On and CHER at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace
as well as “Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs,” an international tour of the
artifacts of King Tut. Recent and current promoted concert tours include Justin Timberlake,
Christina Aguilera, Prince, Bon Jovi, Usher, Nickelback, Kenny Chesney, Rod Stewart, and
Paul McCartney. AEG Live also co-produces the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.
Goldenvoice, the company’s southern California-based regional promotion division, created
and operates the award winning annual Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival.
About Paris Las Vegas
Paris Las Vegas is a Harrah's Entertainment resort. From its dramatic 50-story replica of
the Eiffel Tower to authentic architectural reproductions, Paris Las Vegas features elegant
décor, European-inspired boutiques and a distinctive array of fine cuisine, including Chef
Joho's acclaimed Eiffel Tower Restaurant, Les Artistes Steakhouse and French-bistro Mon
Ami Gabi. The resort celebrates the romance and excitement of the European City of Light.
In the heart of the famous Las Vegas Strip, the passion and sophistication of Paris Las
Vegas transports guests to Europe's most romantic city.
November 23 2009.
MANILOW BRINGS CHRISTMAS TO THE ROSEMONT THEATRE WITH 56-PIECE
ORCHESTRA AND HOLIDAY HITS
Los Angeles, CA (November 23, 2009)—Music Icon Barry Manilow returns to the
Rosemont Theatre in Rosemont, IL on December 17th, 18th and 19th, 2009 for three
nights of music and magic. This engagement will feature a 56-piece orchestra–packed
with Manilow’s iconic hits and holiday songs from his three incredible and heartwarming
Christmas albums including his new album, “In The Swing Of Christmas.”
“Chicago and I have had a long lasting love affair for many years and we always have a
ball when the curtain goes up. I can’t wait to do this show for my Chicago friends supported
by this big and amazing orchestra,” said Manilow.
The pop icon has written hundreds of songs and performed around the globe for millions of
fans, receiving an Oscar nomination and winning a Grammy, two Emmys, and several Tony
Awards along the way. His recently released Christmas record, “In The Swing Of Christmas,”
is Manilow’s third holiday album. In 1990, he released “Because It's Christmas” on Arista;
and in 2002, Columbia issued “A Christmas Gift of Love.” Manilow will next release “The
Greatest Love Songs of All Time,” which will be released in January 2010 in time for
Valentine’s Day.
With worldwide record sales exceeding 80 million, Barry Manilow is ranked as the top
Adult Contemporary chart artist of all time, according to R&R (Radio & Records); with no
less than 25 consecutive top 40 hits to his credit between 1975 and 1983, on the Billboard
Hot 100. The legendary musician has worked on over 40 albums over the course of his
career as a singer, songwriter, arranger and producer; and, is busier than ever.
He recently performed his first ever solo concert at the Hollywood Bowl on October 24th,
2009–where, in association with the Manilow Music Project and the Grammy Foundation,
he raised a donation of $100,000 in musical instruments for the LAUSD. An avid
philanthropist, earlier this year Manilow donated $500,000 in musical instruments to schools
in the Palm Springs/Coachella Valley area.
Additionally, in December, Manilow—with the Manilow Fund for Health and Hope—will
present “A Gift of Love…,” a five-night holiday concert series benefitting local charities at
the McCallum Theatre in Palm Desert, CA. Beginning on December 4th, 2009, the concert
series will honor 25 charities in Palm Springs, California, the singer’s hometown. Tickets
are available at www.starz.bz/agiftoflove.
Tickets to see Manilow’s performance’s in Rosemont, IL are on sale now at
www.Ticketmaster.com and www.LiveNation.com, the venue box office, all Ticketmaster
Outlets or charge by phone at (800) 745-3000.
November 19 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
TOYS FOR TOTS JOINS FORCES WITH BARRY MANILOW AT GIFT OF LOVE
CONCERT SERIES FOR LOCAL CHARITIES IN PALM SPRINGS
Palm Springs, CA (November 18, 2009)—The U.S. Marine Corp’s Toys for Tots program is
joining pop culture icon and music legend Barry Manilow, and the Manilow Fund for Health
and Hope, for “A Gift of Love…,” a five-night holiday concert series at the McCallum Theatre
in Palm Desert, CA. The concert series, beginning on December 4th, 2009 and continuing
on December 5th, 7th, 8th and 9th, which will honor 25 local charities in Palm Springs,
California, the singer’s hometown. Toys for Tots will be on hand each night so that attendees
will be able to make a toy donation to a child in need at the McCallum Theatre on their way in
to see Manilow perform.
In this way the audience can further share in the sense of love and charity the season brings
from beginning to end. Manilow will perform his hit songs in addition to special holiday songs
featured on his new Christmas album, “In the Swing of Christmas,” released October 13th,
2009 and previous holiday releases, “Because It’s Christmas” and “A Christmas Gift of Love.”
“We’re calling this concert “A Gift of Love,” and it’s great to have another way for the audience
to show their love for those less fortunate,” said Manilow. “I think we would all agree that every
day we are able to give back to those in need is a very good day.”
First Sergeant, Brian J. O’Toole says “Barry Manilow exemplifies the spirit of charity not only
at Christmas, but each of the other 364 days of the year. We are glad that we can join him for
his charitable concert series in Palm Springs and bring even more joy to the youngest and so
deserving among us.”
Premium tickets are exclusively available now at www.starz.bz/agiftoflove/ giving concert-
attendees special time with Manilow and additional donations to one of the beneficiary
charities. Premium tickets priced at $750 offer a post-reception and photo-op with Manilow
as well as an additional $500 donation to a designated beneficiary charity. Premium tickets
priced at $1,000 offer a pre-concert champagne reception with Manilow and autographed
program, as well as an additional $750 donation to a designated beneficiary charity. All other
tickets for “A Gift of Love…” with Barry Manilow are available at www.mccallumtheatre.com,
with prices ranging from $85 to $250. Earlier this year Manilow donated $500,000 in musical
instruments to schools in the Palm Springs/Coachella Valley area.
In addition to the holiday concert series and recently released Christmas album, Manilow is
busier than ever, performing his first ever solo concert at the Hollywood Bowl on October 24th,
2009. Barry Manilow’s latest holiday DVD, “Barry Manilow Happy Holiday!,” is available in
stores today. The legendary entertainer is recording his album, “The Greatest Love Songs of
All Time,” which will be released in January 2010 in time for Valentine’s Day.
With worldwide record sales exceeding 75 million, Barry Manilow is ranked as the top Adult
Contemporary chart artist of all time, according to R&R (Radio & Records); with no less than
25 consecutive top 40 hits to his credit between 1975 and 1983, on the Billboard Hot 100.
Manilow has worked on over 40 albums over the course of his career as a singer, songwriter,
arranger and producer.
About Marine Toys for Tots
The Marine Toys for Tots Foundation is a not for profit organization authorized by the U.S.
Marine Corps Reserve to provide fundraising and other necessary support for their annual
Toys for Tots Program. Now in its 62nd year, Toys for Tots provides hope and happiness to
economically disadvantaged children through the gift of a shiny new toy during the Christmas
holiday season. Our gifts offer these children recognition, confidence and a positive memory
they will cherish for a lifetime. Many of the gifts we provide, such as books, games and sports
equipment, make a significant contribution to the educational, social and recreational interests
of these children. In 2008, Marines distributed gifts to 7.6 million children in over 650
communities nationwide. The Marine Toys for Tots Foundation relies on individual donations
from the American public and is supported by corporate sponsorships. For more information,
visit www.toysfortots.org.
“A Gift of Love..” Beneficiary Charities:
The Palm Springs-based charities benefiting from Barry Manilow’s upcoming “A Gift of Love…”
holiday concert include: ACT for MS – Palm Desert, Angel View Crippled Children’s Foundation,
Animal Samaritans, Barbara Sinatra Children’s Center, Big Brothers Big Sisters (BBBS of the
Desert), Boys & Girls Club of the Coachella Valley, Desert AIDS Project, Desert Arc, Desert
Samaritans for the Elderly, Desert Paws, FIND Food Bank, Inc., Gilda’s Club Desert Cities
California, Guide Dogs of the Desert, Healthy Family Foundation: The Ophelia Project, Joslyn
Senior Center, Mourning Star Center, Olive Crest, One Heartland, Pegasus Riding Academy for
the Handicapped, Shelter From The Storm, Stroke Recovery Center, Temple Isaiah Fund, The
Living Desert, United Cerebral Palsy – Inland Empire, and Variety Club of the Desert. For
information on which night the aforementioned charities will be honored, please visit
http://www.benchmarkemail.com/c/l?A1-799556743.
About The Manilow Fund for Health and Hope:
The Manilow Fund for Health & Hope is a nonprofit organization that was created by Barry
Manilow to support local, grassroots organizations that promote education, health and care.
The fund donates to organizations that focus on cancer, AIDS, children’s issues, victims of
abuse, the homeless, animal causes, and music education.
November 12 2009. Manilow gives sneak peek into holiday benefit shows
Palm Springs resident Barry Manilow met the media at the McCallum Theatre on Tuesday
to give some hints about his Christmas gift to the desert.
Tickets went on sale Oct. 26 for “A Gift of Love,” his program of five McCallum Christmas concerts benefiting 25 local charities.
He'll use a full orchestra, including horn and string sections, to perform a mix of hits and holiday songs from his three Christmas albums Dec. 4-5 and Dec. 7-9.
McCallum Director of Presentations & Theater Operations Mitch Gershenfeld said “response has been tremendous,” but tickets are still available at all levels.
Manilow, who has done a benefit concert for one or two charities a year for more than
a decade, said he's been wanting to do a massive benefit concert for many local charities for years. His recent hip surgery, which forced him to convalesce at his Palm Springs home, gave him the time to create a unique
Christmas program and his management company, Stiletto, did the rest.
“We started to put together, ‘How would this work if we did five charities a night for five nights?'” he said. “It was a complicated thing to do. The other thing that
kept us working was my schedule. When was I going to find five nights to do this? So this year was the year.
“(But,) it got more and more complicated. How do you divvy it up? How do you tell the public that their money will go to where they want it? But, I think they got it.
That's why it took so long.”
Manilow, appearing in jeans and a sport coat with black dress shoes, met with reporters individually on the McCallum stage. He walked comfortably and reiterated that he
did not have hip replacement surgery.
He recently announced he's ending his long engagement at the Las Vegas Hilton, but wouldn't say who his next Vegas contract will be with because, “The ink isn't dry
yet.”
He wasn't aware that the Rancho Las Palmas Resort and Spa in Rancho Mirage is offering Manilow fans special rates Dec. 4-10 and donating 10 percent of its room rates to
“A Gift Of Love.” But he said he expects out-of-town fans to come in for this show just as they do for his other concerts.
“There's usually a batch of people that come to see our shows,” he said. “Like with the Hollywood Bowl (concert Oct. 24). That was an unbelievable night. I think there
were a lot of people at that who came from around the world.”
Manilow, a Jewish Brooklyn native, said, “I'm just real good at” creating Christmas music.
His “In the Swing of Christmas” CD for Hallmark was nominated for a Grammy and he recently rereleased it on Arista with his original composition “Christmas Is Just
Around the Corner” and a 1940s jazz version of “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.”
He expects to play several songs from the CD and create a big holiday scene with two giant Christmas trees.
November 5 2009 A GIFT OF LOVE Keeps on Giving!
The entire Palm Springs community is rallying around Barry’s A GIFT OF LOVE benefit
concerts with proceeds going to 25 charities in the Coachella Valley!
We just heard from Rancho Las Palmas Resort and Spa in Rancho Mirage, CA and they
want to (1) give a great rate to you, the fans and (2) support Barry’s A GIFT OF LOVE
concerts at the McCallum Theatre on December 4, 5, 7, 8, and 9. Make a reservation
and 10% of the room rate will be donated to A GIFT OF LOVE!
Here are the special details:
Friday, December 4 and Saturday, December 5 - $229 per night
Sunday, December 6 through Thursday, December 10 - $149 per night
To get these great rates and support A GIFT OF LOVE, simply click here or call the resort
at 760.568.2727 and use the promo code: “Manilow”.
Finally, a limited number of tickets are still available for A GIFT OF LOVE!
Premium tickets that include meet/greets and photos with Barry are available at:
www.starz.bz/agiftoflove.
Fan club tickets are available at: www.starz.bz/bmifc.
Order by phone at 310.957.5788.
See you in December! November 3 2009.
Manilow Holiday DVD In Stores NOW!
Since the holiday season is right around the corner, Barry’s latest holiday DVD, HAPPY
HOLIDAY!, is available in stores TODAY!
HAPPY HOLIDAY! is Barry’s holiday-themed television special from A&E’s “Live By
Request.” Originally broadcast from New York City on a snowy December night in 2003,
this show is one of the highest rated A&E “Live By Request” performances and will be sure to get you in the Holiday spirit! Join Barry and his special guests – José Feliciano and Cyndi Lauper – as he takes telephone
requests from home viewers for their favorite
Christmas songs, including “Jingle Bells,” “White Christmas,” “Rudolph The Red-Nosed
Reindeer,” “It’s Just Another New Year’s Eve,” and more.
Can’t make it to the store? This special DVD is available online at: Starz.bz!
Happy Holidays!
November 2 2009
Manilow.TV Episode #2: The Matinee After The Flood!
You heard about it…
Maybe you experienced it…
Now is the time to re-live it…
The MATINEE AFTER BIG FLOOD of 2002 at the PNC Bank Arts Center in Holmdel,
New Jersey! Episode #2 is available now on Manilow.TV!
As Barry says, “This Manilow.TV episode is the make-up Matinee that we did Sunday
afternoon when the clouds had cleared, clothes had dried, and the sun came out.”
Check it out and tune in today at www.manilow.tv
October 30 2009 A note from Barry
Hi everyone!
I’m recuperating and doing fine.
Thanks for all good wishes.
The Hollywood Bowl show was a fantastic experience for all of us. The crowd was
amazing and the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra was magnificent. Hearing those beautiful
arrangements and orchestrations made me want to stop singing and just listen to them!
The music was definitely a highlight of the night, but a close second was the knowledge
that we were raising money to buy musical instruments for kids in the L.A. schools.
As you know, because of budget slashes, the Music and Arts departments of the
public schools all over the country are being cut.
And even the schools that still have music departments are struggling to keep them
going. They’re running out of instruments and the ones that they do have are in terrible
shape. They need music stands, sheet music, band uniforms – you name it, they need it.
Music classes aren’t just for playtime. Music keeps the kids in school. Really. It keeps
the kids coming back to school.
Ask any music teacher and they all say the same thing: when kids are in music
classes their grades go up, they learn how to interact with other students and they stay
in school.
The thought that the schools don’t have musical instruments or worse, that they may
not have Music classes at all is just killing me.
I would like to ask you all to dive in and help me if you possibly can.
It would be so great if you could call your local high schools or middle schools and ask
them what instruments they needed and if you could spring it, get the instruments for them.
I’m not suggesting anything near as large as what we’ve been doing of course. Just a
trumpet or a clarinet or maybe even one of those Casio or Sony keyboards.
Maybe you’ve got some old music stands in the basement or a set of drums that no
one is using anymore up in the attic. Just dust off Aunt Bessie, push her out of the way,
and drive the set of drums down to the school!
If you guys could begin to help your local schools by keeping their music classes going,
it would be the greatest Get-Well gift you could ever give me.
Once again, thanks for all the get-well wishes.
See you soon.
Love,
Barry
PS……If you don’t have an Aunt Bessie…..and want us to get instruments to schools
in need…..you can also go to: www.manilowfund.org then hit Donate Now………..
October 25 2009.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Barry Manilow PRESENTS LAUSD and GRAMMY Foundation with major
donation of $100,000 in musical instruments at Hollywood Bowl Concert
At the Special Pre-Concert Gala to Benefit The Manilow Music Project & the Los
Angeles Unified School District, Manilow Delivers Gift of Instruments and Education
Los Angeles (October 24, 2009) –Pop culture icon and legendary showman Barry Manilow
hosted his first-ever solo concert at the Hollywood Bowl on October 24th, 2009, with many
of the proceeds going directly to The Manilow Music Project and The GRAMMY Foundation®.
Starting the evening with yet another act of giving to the Los Angeles community, Manilow
surprised attendees by presenting the LAUSD with a donation of $100,000 worth of
instruments for its underfunded music program. Manilow briefly spoke about the importance
of music in his own life before presenting yet another donation—two $5,000 Signature
School Enterprise Awards to the GRAMMY Foundation®, also benefitting the LAUSD.
“It gives me great personal joy to be able to get these instruments into the hands of the
LAUSD’s students. Music has been the foundation of my life and to be able to give that
gift to others is both joyous and humbling,” states Manilow.
Superintendant Ramon Cortines commented, “Barry Manilow continues to show his
tireless dedication and advocacy by extending the reach of musical education to the children
in our community. We are profoundly moved by his continued generosity and support in such
tough economic times.”
Manilow, who will end his 5-year partnership with the Las Vegas Hilton this year, regularly
performs in arenas throughout the world. He recently performed to a record-breaking,
sold-out crowd of 40,000 fans at the BBC Proms in the Park on the world-famous Last Night
of the Proms in Hyde Park, London. The event was broadcast live on BBC Radio 2 and BBC
TV reaching an audience of countless millions.
In December Manilow together with the Manilow Fund for Health and Hope, will present
“A Gift of Love…,” a five-night holiday concert series at the McCallum Theatre in Palm
Desert, CA. The concert series, beginning on December 4th, 2009 and continuing on
December 5th, 7th, 8th and 9th, will honor 25 local charities in Palm Springs, California,
the singer’s hometown—each night benefiting five of the beneficiary charities tickets are
available at www.starz.bz/agiftoflove. Earlier this year Manilow donated $500,000 in
musical instruments to schools in the Palm Springs/Coachella Valley area.
The Manilow Music Project
Last year, in response to the needs of public schools and their severely depleted music
programs, Barry Manilow gathered some friends and formed The Manilow Music Project
as part of his non-profit, Manilow Fund for Health and Hope. The mission statement of the
Project highlights the importance of music programs in U.S. schools and donates
instruments and materials to school music programs.
The Manilow Music Project is sponsored by Yamaha and BevMo!
Proceeds from Manilow wine purchases at BevMo! retail stores in California go directly to
The Manilow Music Project.
The GRAMMY Foundation
The GRAMMY Foundation was established in 1989 to cultivate the understanding, appreciation
and advancement of the contribution of recorded music to American culture — from the artistic
and technical legends of the past to the still unimagined musical breakthroughs of future
generations of music professionals. The Foundation accomplishes this mission through
programs and activities that engage the music industry and cultural community as well as the
general public. The Foundation works in partnership year-round with its founder, The
Recording Academy®, to bring national attention to important issues such as the value and
impact of music and arts education and the urgency of preserving our rich cultural heritage.
For more information, please visit www.grammyintheschools.com.
October 20, 2009
Hold on to your hat… Barry has done it again.
This December… Barry Manilow and the Manilow Fund for Health and Hope… would like
to give 25 charity organizations… a Christmas present.
Starting on December 4th… we will present A Gift Of Love… five Christmas concerts
starring Barry. The concerts will be held at the McCallum Theatre in Palm Desert, CA on
December 4th, December 5th, December 7th, December 8th and December 9th.
All of the proceeds from the concerts will be distributed to the 25 charities on the list below.
We hope to raise at least $500,000. Probably more.
There are a limited number of Premium Tickets for each concert. They are going fast…
we only have a few left!
Fourteen tickets per concert will be available for $1000.
These include FRONT ROW seats… a small-group champagne reception with Barry prior
to the concert… an autographed program… and a photo with Barry.
Forty -four tickets per concert will be available for $750.
These include Premium Orchestra seats… a post-concert reception in the Founders
Room… and photos with Barry.
The Premium Tickets are ONLY available online at www.starz.bz/agiftoflove and only
available via credit card.
When you purchase your tickets online, you will need to pick a charity to receive the
proceeds from your Premium Ticket.
Here’s the list of the charities benefitting from these special concerts:
ACT for MS – Palm Desert
Angel View Crippled Children’s Foundation
Animal Samaritans
Barbara Sinatra Children’s Center
Big Brothers Big Sisters (BBBS of the Desert)
Boys & Girls Club of the Coachella Valley
Desert AIDS Project
Desert Arc
Desert Samaritans for the Elderly
Desert Paws
FIND Food Bank, Inc.
Gilda’s Club Desert Cities California
Guide Dogs of the Desert
Healthy Family Foundation: The Ophelia Project
Joslyn Senior Center
Mourning Star Center
Olive Crest
One Heartland
Pegasus Riding Academy for the Handicapped
Shelter From The Storm
Stroke Recovery Center
Temple Isaiah Fund
The Living Desert
United Cerebral Palsy – Inland Empire
Variety Club of the Desert October 15 2009.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
BARRY MANILOW HOSTS SPECIAL HOLIDAY CONCERTS IN PALM SPRINGS TO
BENEFIT LOCAL CHARITIES
Pop culture icon and music legend Barry Manilow,
together with the Manilow Fund for Health and Hope, will present “A Gift of Love…,” a five-
night holiday concert series at the McCallum Theatre in Palm Desert, CA. The concert
series, beginning on December 4th, 2009 and continuing on December 5th, 7th, 8th and 9th,
will honor 25 local charities in Palm Springs, California, the singer’s hometown—each night
benefiting five of the beneficiary charities. Manilow will perform his hit songs in addition to
special holiday songs featured on his new Christmas album, “In the Swing of Christmas,”
released October 13th, 2009 and previous holiday releases, “Because It’s Christmas” and
“A Christmas Gift of Love”.
“Being able to give back to my hometown, both in song and charitable support, makes this
concert series a very personal and special event for me,” said Manilow. “The twenty-five
recipient charities are invaluable to the Palm Springs community, so extending the holiday
spirit of giving to these non-profit organizations is really a special treat.”
Premium tickets are exclusively available now at www.starz.bz/agiftoflove giving concert-
attendees special time with Manilow and additional donations to one of the beneficiary
charities. Premium tickets priced at $750 offer a post-reception and photo-op with Manilow as
well as an additional $500 donation to a designated beneficiary charity. Premium tickets priced
at $1,000 offer a pre-concert champagne reception with Manilow and autographed program, as
well as an additional $750 donation to a designated beneficiary charity.
All other tickets for “A Gift of Love…” with Barry Manilow are available beginning October 26th
at www.mccallumtheatre.com, with prices ranging from $85 to $250.
In addition to the holiday concert series and recently released Christmas album, Manilow is
busier than ever, performing his first ever solo concert at the Hollywood Bowl on October 24th,
2009. The legendary entertainer is recording his album, “The Greatest Love Songs of All
Time,” which will be released in January 2010 in time for Valentine’s Day.
Manilow, who will end his 5-year partnership with the Las Vegas Hilton on December 30, 2009,
regularly headlines performances in arenas throughout the world. Recently, Manilow
performed to a record-breaking, sold-out crowd of 40,000 fans at the BBC Proms in the Park
on the world-famous Last Night of the Proms in Hyde Park, London.
“A Gift of Love..” Beneficiary Charities:
The Palm Springs-based charities benefiting from Barry Manilow’s upcoming “A Gift of Love…”
holiday concert include: ACT for MS – Palm Desert, Angel View Crippled Children’s Foundation,
Animal Samaritans, Barbara Sinatra Children’s Center, Big Brothers Big Sisters (BBBS of the
Desert), Boys & Girls Club of the Coachella Valley, Desert AIDS Project, Desert Arc, Desert
Samaritans for the Elderly, Desert Paws, FIND Food Bank, Inc., Gilda’s Club Desert Cities
California, Guide Dogs of the Desert, Healthy Family Foundation: The Ophelia Project, Joslyn
Senior Center, Mourning Star Center, Olive Crest, One Heartland, Pegasus Riding Academy
for the Handicapped, Shelter From The Storm, Stroke Recovery Center, Temple Isaiah Fund,
The Living Desert, United Cerebral Palsy – Inland Empire, and Variety Club of the Desert.
For information on which night the aforementioned charities will be honored, please visit
www.starz.bz/agiftoflove.
About The Manilow Fund for Health and Hope:
The Manilow Fund for Health & Hope is a nonprofit organization that was created by Barry
Manilow to support local, grassroots organizations that promote education, health and care.
The fund donates to organizations that focus on cancer, AIDS, children’s issues, victims of
abuse, the homeless and music education. October 13, 2009
Barry’s holiday album, IN THE SWING OF CHRISTMAS, with two NEW songs is available today!
Barry’s version of the classic, “Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer,” and his original song,
“Christmas Is Just Around The Corner,” (music by Barry and lyrics by Bruce Sussman) are two new additions to this twelve song holiday gem.
Get it online at STARZ.bz for the special price of $10.99! Click here to get your copy today! >
http://www.starz.bz/barrymanilow/product.cfm?product=3218
October 12, 2009
Barry and BevMo! Team Up for the Manilow Music Project!
Recently, the Manilow Music Project partnered with the massive beverage retailer, BevMo!, to raise money for the Manilow Music Project!
All proceeds from sales of the Manilow Pinot Grigio in all BevMo! stores will go directly to the Manilow Music Project! And, the Pinot Grigio is part of BevMo!’s popular nickel sale which started this week.
Visit your local BevMo! store or order online at: http://bit.ly/x4C8R
So…hurry up! Stock up! And, support the Manilow Music Project!
October 8th 2009PRESS RELEASE:
BARRY MANILOW RE-SIGNS WITH ARISTA RECORDS
ANNOUNCES NEW ALBUM, IN THE SWING OF CHRISTMAS, ARRIVING IN STORES
OCTOBER 13th AND COLLABORATES ONCE AGAIN WITH CLIVE DAVIS ON THE
GREATEST LOVE SONGS OF ALL TIME, SET FOR RELEASE IN JANUARY
IN THE SWING OF CHRISTMAS Features 12 Yuletide favorites: “Silver Bells,”
“Ha ve Yourself A Merry Little Christmas,” “The Christmas Song” (aka “Chestnuts
Roasting On An Open Fire”), “Count Your Blessings,” “Rudolph The Red Nosed
Reindeer,” and Manilow’s original “Christmas Is Just Around The Corner” (From
Cranberry Christmas) AND MORE!
(OCTOBER 7, 2009– New York, NY) Grammy, Tony, and Emmy Award-winning recording
artist Barry Manilow, has just announced that he has re-signed his recording deal with
Arista Records and will be releasing two new albums, one of seasonal favorites, ringing in
the holidays with contemporary and traditional yuletide repertoire on IN THE SWING OF
CHRISTMAS and THE GREATEST LOVE SONGS OF ALL TIME scheduled for release
in January, just in time for Valentine’s Day (track listing and details for THE GREATEST
LOVE SONGS OF ALL TIME to be announced soon).
On the heels of the extraordinarily successful “decades” series (Greatest Songs of the
Fifties, Sixties,
Seventies and Eighties),
IN THE SWING OF CHRISTMAS¸ produced
and arranged by Manilow, will arrive in stores on October 13th. A special pre-order
campaign at the www.manilow.com website and at Amazon will ensure that fans will
receive IN THE SWING OF CHRISTMAS in its very first week of release.
Manilow, who has had a long-standing relationship with Arista Records and its founder
Clive Davis, now Chief Creative Officer, Sony Music Entertainment will be teaming up once
again to record his forthcoming album THE GREATEST LOVE SONGS OF ALL TIME, set
for release in January. Davis has been a perennial collaborator with Manilow on virtually all
his recordings, since they first worked together on “Mandy,” Manilow’s debut #1 single as
the first artist signed to Arista by Davis in 1974, the first year of the label’s existence.
Beyond the sensational “decades” series, Arista is the home to Manilow’s biggest hits
including “Mandy,” “It’s a Miracle,” “Could It Be Magic,” “I Write the Songs,” “Looks Like We
Made It,” “Can’t Smile Without You,” “Copacabana (At the Copa),” “Somewhere In the Night,”
“Ships,” “I Made It Through the Rain,” and many, many more. Comments Clive Davis:
“Barry and I have a mission to bring to a new generation the great songs that are the
soundtrack of our lives. This album does just that and Barry is sounding better than ever."
IN THE SWING OF CHRISTMAS presents a dozen holiday gems. Contemporary standards
include: “Silver Bells” (first recorded by Bing Crosby & Carol Richards in 1950);
“Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas” (introduced by Judy Garland in the 1944 MGM
musical Meet Me in St. Louis); “Christmas Time Is Here” (one of the instrumental themes
composed by Vince Guaraldi for 1965’s A Charlie Brown Christmas); and “The Christmas
Song” (aka “Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire,” the Mel Tormé standard that became
an evergreen after Nat King Cole’s 1953 recording).
More: “Violets For Your Furs” (a Frank Sinatra rarity from his album Songs for Young
Lovers, 1954); “Toyland” (a perennial favorite from Victor Herbert’s 1903 operetta, Babes
in Toyland); “Count Your Blessings” (by Irving Berlin, from 1954’s timeless film, White
Christmas); Johnny Marks’ classic “Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer” (popularized by
Gene Autry in 1949); and “Christmas Is Just Around The Corner,” composed by Manilow
for Cranberry Christmas, the ABC Family animated TV special first broadcast in December
2008, based on the 1976 children's book of the same title.
IN THE SWING OF CHRISTMAS is actually the third album of holiday songs recorded by
Barry Manilow during his career. In 1990, he released the 10-song Because It's Christmas
on Arista; and in 2002, Columbia issued A Christmas Gift of Love.
IN THE SWING OF CHRISTMAS is Barry Manilow’s follow-up to the mega-bestselling
series of “decades” albums that he masterminded with Arista founder and co-producer
Clive Davis. The series began in January 2006 with The Greatest Songs Of The Fifties,
which entered the Billboard 200 album chart at #1 (his first #1 album since Barry Manilow/
Live in 1977), and was20certified RIAA platinum. The Greatest Songs Of The Sixties
(October 2006) entered at #2. When the RIAA platinum The Greatest Songs Of The
Seventies entered at #4 (September 2007), Barry Manilow was distinguished as the only
artist to chart three Top 5 debuts during 2006-2007. The most recent entry in the series,
The Greatest Songs Of The Eighties was released November 2008.
With worldwide record sales exceeding 75 million, Barry Manilow is ranked as the top Adult
Contemporary chart artist of all time, according to R&R (Radio & Records); with no less than
25 consecutive top 40 hits to his credit between 1975 and 1983, on the Billboard Hot 100.
Manilow has worked on over 40 albums over the course of his career as a singer,
songwriter, arranger and producer.
Stay tuned for further information on THE GREATEST LOVE SONGS OF ALL TIME set
for release in January.
Barry Manilow: IN THE SWING OF CHRISTMAS (final track listing)
“Silver Bells”
“Carol Of The Bells/Jingle Bells”
“Joy To The World/It’s The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year”
“Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas”
“Violets For Your Furs”
“O Tannenbaum/Winter Wonderland”
“Christmas Time Is Here”
“The Christmas Song” (aka “Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire”)
“Toyland”
“Count Your Blessings”
“Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer”
“Christmas Is Just Around The Corner”
October 7th. 2009.FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
MANILOW CONCLUDES RECORD-SETTTING FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT AT LAS
VEGAS HILTON
LAS VEGAS — Barry Manilow’s record-setting five-year engagement at the Las Vegas
Hilton will conclude on December 30, 2009.
“Barry Manilow is an exceptional entertainer and we have been extremely fortunate to have had him as our resident headliner at the Las Vegas
Hilton for the last five years,” said Ken Ciancimino, Executive Vice President Administration of the Las Vegas Hilton. “Although this current engagement is ending, our friendship with him endures and we will continue to
explore possibilities for future endeavors together.”
Barry Manilow began his long-term engagement with the Las Vegas Hilton in February, 2005 with
“Manilow: Music and Passion.” His current show, “ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits,” debuted in July of 2008. By the end of the year Manilow will have performed well over 300 shows, to
nearly 450,000 people with gross ticket sales of more than $70 million.“ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits” is packed with chart-topping music spanning his spectacular career, and gives
fans an opportunity to enjoy decades of Manilow’s music and his amazing showmanship.
The remaining performances of “ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits” at the Las Vegas Hilton are October 1-3, October 8-10, November 27-29 and December
28-30. Show times are 8 p.m. in the legendary Hilton Theater. Stage seat tickets are $225 (plus tax and service charge). The seats are up close and personal with 34 located on each side of the stage and at the same
level. Main orchestra tickets are $125-175 (plus tax and service charge); rear orchestra tickets $65-$85 (plus tax and service charge) and balcony $65 (plus tax and
service charge). Tickets can be purchased at the Las Vegas Hilton box office, online at
www.lvhilton.com, www.vegas.com,
www.ticketmaster.com or by calling 702-732-5755 or 1-800-222-5361.
October 2nd 2009.
PRESS RELEASE:
Barry Manilow’s First Solo Concert at the Hollywood Bowl on
October 24th to Benefit Los Angeles Music Students
Special Pre-Concert Gala to Benefit The Manilow Music Project &
the Los Angeles Unified School District
Los Angeles (October 1, 2009) –Pop culture icon and legendary showman Barry Manilow
will perform his first ever solo concert at the Hollywood Bowl on Saturday, October 24, at
7:30pm. “Manilow at the Hollywood Bowl” will feature the 60-piece Hollywood Bowl
orchestra and will be packed with Manilow’s hits and a few surprises. In partnership with
the GRAMMY Foundation®, this special concert will coincide with the inaugural event for
The Manilow Music Project. A pre-concert gala will provide desperately needed musical
instruments for the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), to help in these times of
drastic budget cuts. Manilow will appear at the private pre-show reception for VIP donors
with all proceeds going directly to the Project and GRAMMY Foundation. The GRAMMY
Foundation influences the lives of young people by opening the windows of opportunity that
music can provide for their futures, and leads efforts to ensure that contributions made by
our musical icons will live on in our cultural heritage.
“We’re not just giving these kids instruments—we’re giving them self-esteem. When I look at
how music shaped my own life from a very young age, I realize the importance of what we
are doing,” states Manilow.
Superintendant Ramon Cortines commented, “Barry Manilow is a dedicated advocate for
education and the invaluable lessons musicianship brings to children and young adults. He
has tirelessly dedicated his time, talent, energy and funds to get instruments into the hands
of LAUSD school children. We are grateful for all that he does and proud to work in partnership
with The Manilow Music Project on this historic event.”
Barry Manilow recently performed to a record-breaking, sold-out crowd of 40,000 fans at the
BBC Proms in the Park on the world-famous Last Night of the Proms in Hyde Park, London.
The event was broadcast live on BBC Radio 2 and BBC TV reaching an audience of countless
millions. He regularly headlines in Las Vegas and frequently performs in arenas throughout
the country.
The Manilow Music Project
Last year, in response to the needs of public schools and their severely depleted music
programs, Barry gathered some friends and formed The Manilow Music Project as part of his
non-profit, Manilow Fund for Health and Hope. The mission statement of the Project highlights
the importance of music programs in U.S. schools and donates instruments and materials to
school music programs.
The Manilow Music Project is sponsored by Yamaha and BevMo!
Proceeds from Manilow wine purchases at BevMo! retail stores in California go directly to
The Manilow Music Project.
For VIP Tickets: visit www.manilowfund.org or call Levy Pazanti & Associates at ph:
310-201-5033. Proceeds from the VIP Tickets support The Manilow Music Project.
For Concert Tickets: visit www.ticketmaster.com or call ph: 800-745-3000.
The GRAMMY Foundation was established in 1989 to cultivate the understanding, appreciation
and advancement of the contribution of recorded music to American culture — from the artistic
and technical legends of the past to the still unimagined musical breakthroughs of future
generations of music professionals. The Foundation accomplishes this mission through
programs and activities that engage the music industry and cultural community as well as the
general public. The Foundation works in partnership year-round with its founder, The Recording
Academy®, to bring national attention to important issues such as the value and impact of music
and arts education and the urgency of preserving our rich cultural heritage. For more information,
please visit www.grammyintheschools.com. October 1st 2009.
Manilow.TV is ON THE AIR!
That’s right!
The brand new www.Manilow.TV launched yesterday and it’s your source for never
before seen, exclusive videos chosen by Barry just for you!
Airing right now are TWO concerts performed at London’s Wembley Arena on April 20
and 21, 1996.
When asked why he chose these two concerts for the Manilow.TV debut, Barry said:
“I've chosen these two concerts as our first Manilow.TV episodes because of their
uniqueness:
a. We were in the round for the first time
b. There are songs during the shows that I don't remember ever singing again
c. The cast of "Copacabana" which was playing in the West End at the time was in the
audience on the second night.
Stuff like that.
We began the 12 show tour in London, did the tour all over the country and then came
back and ended the tour for two extra nights at the Wembley Arena.
These two shows are our last nights of that tour.
They stuck Marc and his camera up in the gods, but he's so great at this that I think you'll
still get a very good sense of the show.
Enjoy!”
Manilow.TV members can log in and watch these concerts as often as they want at
www.Manilow.TV.
Not a member yet? Signing up is easy at: Starz.bz!
Sit back, relax and enjoy the show!
Monday September 28 2009. A note from Barry...(Taken from Manilow.com.)
Hi everyone,
Boy oh boy, this is a very busy and productive time in Manilow-land!
I thought I’d bring you all up to date on what I’m working on since there is so much happening.
Manilow TV is a very exciting project and it’s just about ready to go.
The videos that I’m about to share with all of you were never meant to be shown publicly. They were meant for me to study and for archival purposes, but I thought that some of you would find them interesting and
entertaining, so I’ve decided to share them with you.
It’s taken a huge amount of technical work to put them online. Many people have worked long and hard to put this project together, but I’m so grateful to all of you for sticking with me for all these years, I decided
to let them out.
I sincerely hope you enjoy them and that they bring back great memories for all of you and surprises for those of you who never got to see those performances.
The Hollywood Bowl concert is fast approaching and I couldn’t be more excited about it. I’ve never performed an evening there and it should be thrilling for
all of us.
We’ve got the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra backing us up. Hearing all of these gorgeous arrangements and orchestrations finally being played by a 50 member orchestra should be fantastic. I can’t wait. Hope you can make
it.
Now about the next few CD releases.
My “Fifteen Minutes” CD isn’t ready to release yet. As I’ve told you, it’s more guitar driven and rock oriented than I’ve ever done
Since I’m in uncharted waters, it’s taking me longer to create this one than I expected.
I’m very proud of the 17 songs that Enoch Anderson and I have written. They’re emotional and edgy and they all tell a story. I think you’ll like it.
However, it won’t be done until next summer.
In the meantime Clive Davis has asked that I record a CD called “Barry Manilow Sings The Greatest Love Songs Of All Time”.
I know I said that I was done with recording cover albums, but getting to sing and arrange songs written by Irving Berlin, George Gershwin and Burt Bacharach was a very difficult thing to turn down.
We’re nearly done with this CD and I must tell you it’s turning out to be one of the most beautiful albums I’ve ever made.
It’s an honor to sing and arrange songs written by the greatest composers of all time.
Releasing three albums of music in 18 months is amazing. Lots of work, but very satisfying and creative.
Between all of albums, Manilow TV and a brand-new live show in Vegas, I hope you don’t get sick of me!
I’ve been getting comments about how thin I look these days. That’s me. Skinny guy. But I’m healthy and filled with energy and thank goodness, I still have my hair! So please don’t be concerned about me.
As long as I have my music and all of you, I’m fine.
Thanks everyone for everything.
Love,
Barry
September 27, 2009. BARRY MANILOW! GARDENING HEALS STAR'S DARK PAST
Barry Manilow has gone from crooner to pruner, admitting he likes nothing better than pottering in his greenhouse growing fruit and veg.
The 66-year-old star has enjoyed a 35-year career in showbusiness with hits such as Mandy and his 1978 Grammy award-winning Copacabana.
But the green-fingered American confessed he retreats to his garden to “heal” and “meditate” which helps him deal with his troubled childhood.
“I do as much normal things as I know how to do,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs.
“I have got a greenhouse and I have learned how to play around down there. I do (take plants from seedlings). Actually I’m not bad at it.
“I wouldn’t say I have the greenest thumb in the world but by myself it is a very meditative thing. I put on my classical music and I go down there and before I know it things are popping up.
“It’s beautiful. I have gardenias growing, loads of fruit and vegetables growing.
“It’s great down there. It still allows me to be quiet. It is very healing.”
But the regular visits to his greenhouse sanctuary could not be more different from Manilow’s early days in showbiz, which he now refers to as his “a***hole years”.
“When the hurricane of success hits you the worst of your personality comes out,” he said.
It hit me too after Mandy came out and I had a million people fawning over me. The life I knew just disappeared... and I didn’t know how to behave.
“I looked up four years later and I didn’t have any friends. I started to make friends with this fame and started to call everybody I ever knew and apologise to them for behaving badly and little by little I got a
life.”
July 17 2009.
Mark your calendar!
Barry is coming to Chicago for TWO nights and Monday is your chance to buy tickets!
Here are the details:
Rosemont Theatre
Rosemont, IL
Thursday, December 17 and Friday, December 18, 2009
Front Row tickets are available NOW at www.frontrowmanilow.com.
BMIFC Tickets for this show will go on-sale Monday, July 20, 2009 at 10:00 AM PDT.
BMIFC members can go to or call 310-957-5788 to get great seats before they are available to the general public.
June 24 2009.
Manilow Concert Update: Spokane Cancellation
Because of scheduling conflicts, we have been forced to cancel the performance of
“ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits…and then some” at the Spokane Arena on Friday,
October 23, 2009.
BMIFC members who ordered tickets via STARZ.bz will receive an automatic refund.
Tickets purchased via the TicketsWest call center or www.ticketswest.com
will be
automatically returned and the card used in the original purchase will be refunded. If you
ordered your tickets in person at an outlet or at the box office, please bring your tickets to
the Spokane Arena or mail them to P.O. BOX 6459, SPOKANE, WA 99217.
Are you on twitter???
We are. Join Us!!
June 10 2009. A Manilow FLOOD and a Manilow FIRST!
Barry is bringing "ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits...and then some" to Holmdel, NJ and
Uncasville, CT!
Many of you remember the big flood at PNC last time Barry was there. Now is the time to
do your “anti-rain” dance as he prepares to return on:
Friday, August 14
Holmdel, NJ
PNC Bank Arts Center
It’s not Barry’s first time in Connecticut, but it is his first time in Uncasville! Join him as he
brings the Manilow magic to the Mohegan Sun on:
Saturday, August 15
Uncasville, CT
Mohegan Sun Arena
Front Row tickets are available NOW at www.frontrowmanilow.com!
BMIFC tickets for these shows will go on sale Thursday, June 11, at 10:00 AM PDT.
BMIFC members can go to www.starz.bz/bmifc or call 310-957-5788 to get great seats
before they are available to the general public.
May 29,2009
BARRY MANILOW LEADS AN ALL-STAR CAST INCLUDING
ARETHA FRANKLIN, NATASHA BEDINGFIELD
THE CAST OF THE JERSEY BOYS AND THE MUPPETS FROM SESAME STREET!
Washington, D.C., May 28, 2009 – Emmy and Golden Globe Award-winning actor Jimmy
Smits returns to host the biggest and brightest birthday party in the country, “A Capitol
Fourth,” featuring for the first time ever, Barry Manilow, who will both open and close the
concert broadcast with a stirring medley of hits and patriotic classics along with the National
Symphony Orchestra and the Choral Arts Society of Washington. He will be joined by the
Queen of Soul Aretha Franklin, international pop sensation Natasha Bedingfield, the Tony
and Grammy Award-winning cast of Jersey Boys, multi Grammy Award-nominee Michael
Feinstein and acclaimed classical pianist Andrew von Oeyen. This star-studded cast will
light up the stage on the West Lawn of the United States Capitol for the 29th annual A
CAPITOL FOURTH celebration featuring unrivaled musical performances with the National
Symphony Orchestra under the direction of America’s prince of pops Erich Kunzel. As a
special treat for the entire family, Elmo, Big Bird, Cookie Monster, Oscar the Grouch and more
of the SESAME STREET gang will be on hand to celebrate America’s 233rd birthday. The
Muppets will perform a musical medley of patriotic favorites as well as iconic songs that we all
know and love from this breakthrough children’s television series that is celebrating 40 years of
fun and learning. The multi-award winning A CAPITOL FOURTH, featuring the most
spectacular fireworks display anywhere in the nation, will be broadcast live in high definition
and commercial free on PBS Saturday, July 4, 2009 from 8:00 to 9:30 p.m. ET (check local
listings) before a concert audience of hundreds of thousands, millions more at home, as well
as on National Public Radio and around the world to our troops on the American Forces Radio
and Television Network.
The skyline of the nation’s capital will come alive with vibrant and booming pyrotechnics, set
against silhouettes of national landmarks the U.S. Capitol, the Washington Monument, the
Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials. A Capitol Fourth will capture this stunning fireworks display
from every vantage point with eighteen TV cameras stationed around the city – including the
U.S. Capitol, the White House, the Washington Monument and across the Potomac River.
Capping off the show will be a rousing rendition of Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture” complete with
live cannon fire provided by the United States Army Presidential Salute Battery, an audience
favorite and now A Capitol Fourth tradition. Also participating in the event will be The U.S.
Army Herald Trumpets, The U.S. Army Ceremonial Band, The U.S. Army “Old Guard” Fife
and Drum Corps and the Armed Forces Color Guard provided by the Military District of
Washington, D.C.
Commented Smits, “I am honored to be asked once again to host this year's special party to
celebrate our great country's birthday…and what a 'guest list!' The music itself embraces so
many genres – we’ve got pop, we’ve got classical and we’ve got soul. Throw in an anniversary
celebration of Sesame Street, topped off with the biggest fireworks display around and we’ve
got quite a show!”
For A Capitol Fourth executive producer Jerry Colbert has assembled an award-winning
production team that features the top Hollywood talent behind some of television’s most
prestigious entertainment awards shows. This includes Emmy award-winning producer Walter
C. Miller, American’s leading director and producer of live programs including the Grammy
Awards and Country Music Awards; award-winning director Paul Miller whose credits include
the Country Music Awards and Saturday Night Live; and veteran television writer Jon Macks,
whose credits include the Tonight Show with Jay Leno, the Academy Awards and the Emmy
Awards. The program is a co-production of Jerry Colbert of Capital Concerts and WETA,
Washington, D.C.
For more than 25 years, Capital Concerts has produced the two major patriotic events at the
U.S. Capitol. In 1981, Colbert presented the first PBS Fourth of July telecast with the National
Symphony Orchestra and guest artists performing live from the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol.
In 1990, he introduced the National Memorial Day Concert. Since then, both holiday specials
have been honored with over 80 awards including the New York Film Festival Award, the Telly
Award, the Golden Cine Award, the Videographer Award, the National Education Association
Award, the Aurora Award, the Christopher Award, the Communicator’s Award, the AXIEM Award,
the Omni Award and the Writer’s Guild of America Award.
A Capitol Fourth 2009 is made possible by grants from The Boeing Company, the National
Park Service, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the Department of the Army, the National
Endowment for the Arts, PBS and public television stations nationwide. Air travel is provided by
American Airlines.
May 26 2009. Manilow Provides Lifetime of Memories
There are those who talk about helping and then there are those who actually do. We are so blessed in this community to have many to whom this applies. One of the Coachella Valley's luminaries stepped to
the fore, again, and with little fanfare changed the lives of a group of students.
You might recall that in September, Barry Manilow kicked off the Manilow Music Project through encouraging individuals to get involved in local schools by donating instruments or
music. He collected the needs from all of the middle and high schools in the Coachella Valley and donated $500,000 of instruments, stands and music.
His message was clear: “Anyone can do it, anyone. Just call your local elementary or high school and talk to the music director. See what they need. You can send them a set of drums
or used trumpets that are in your basement, and that would make all the difference in the world to young kids. That is the key, helping the kids and making a difference in their lives and their future.”
Providing the instruments was only the beginning.
Members of the Palm Springs High School Jazz Band recently boarded a bus provided by Manilow for an overnight trip to Las Vegas, where the members had an opportunity to meet the
singer, get a behind-the-scene glimpse on stage of the workings of a legendary concert performer and become an enthralled audience member. They shared his performance with more than 1,500 of Manilow's adoring fans.
Manilow paid all the expenses.
Most of the students had never been to a live concert of the magnitude of the “Ultimate Manilow” show, and most had never stayed in a hotel of the caliber of the Las Vegas Hilton.
To see the students interact with Manilow, for them to feel his genuine interest in their pursuit of music and for him to recognize them during his show and talk about his home in the Coachella Valley provided lifetime
memories and an amazing sense of pride.
The Manilow Music Project is about ensuring that the music does not stop and that students continue to have the opportunity to learn about the art and language of music, allowing it
to become a part of their soul. Manilow met and exceeded these goals with his gifts.
From a very appreciative group of students, faculty, and parents, thank you, Barry, for keeping the music alive.
Brian Ingelson is the director of the Spirit of the Sands band at Palm Springs High School. Reach him at
bcingelson@psusd.us
May 26 2009 The BMIFC convention Concert review By Dana Holland. Note; Dana
Holland wrote thousands of reviews. Here is her review from the Barry Manilow convention, held in the weekend of may 22-24. Las Vegas Hilton. This show was... There's
not an adjective in the English language to
describe this show. It went so far beyond awesome, magnificent... I
honestly think this was the best show I have ever seen. I really think
my words are going to fall short of what I'm feeling this time. But
I'll do my best...
Barry opened the show wearing the beautiful bright red jacket.
Sometimes he kind of walks out of the smoke, sometimes he kind of
bounces - I think tonight the proper word would be "bounded"! He had a
huge grin on his face. The crowd was standing long before he came out -
they were standing the moment the opening music started.
Barry started the show with It's a Miracle, of course. (always, please
always!) When he finished the song, the cheering and applause was
deafening. He was beaming - he had a grin from ear to ear. Even the
backups were grinning at the audience response. At some point Barry
made a comment that he had been having a hard time without us (paraphrased).
Tonight, Barry went with one of those microphones that fit on your head
- well, the backups wore those, too. I remember Barry tried that
before, I think it was in 2000, and it just wouldn't work for him. He
did have a little trouble keeping this one in place and had to have help
a couple of times. But other than that, from a spectator's point of
view, it was great. Like Barry said, he could do so much more with his
hands. And that added to his performance - he was able to convey the
emotion even better.
He went into the opening medley of Daybreak, Somewhere in the Night, and
This One's For You. Barry seemed so "up". Oh, and his voice was
fantastic - just fantastic. He looked fantastic, too.
Next Barry sang Weekend in New England. It was a beautiful
performance. That's where I really noticed just how good his voice
sounded. At the point where people sometimes yell out, they yelled
later than usual. Barry was so funny - he acted as if he were about to
go full steam ahead into the song, and then was having to try to brake
because of the audience reaction. And then he chuckled... A very cute
moment. Barry then finished the song - a lot of emotion, great performance.
Barry inserted Can't Smile Without You into the first part of the show
this time. Most of the audience stood through the entire song. This
might have been where Barry made the comment about needing us.
He did mention this was the fan club convention. He said B-M-I-F-C
while counting on his fingers, which was cute. He said that we were
there to celebrate his personage. And he told the civilians in the
audience that if they should meet any of "these lovely people" (meaning
the fans), that they should just give in. He said, "You're mine now -
you're in the Manilow zone."
Barry sang a snippet of The Old Songs, but instead of the decades
medley, he went straight into Looks Like We Made It. It was a great
performance. It was also a very sexy performance. Sometimes I refer to
"naughty" moments during the song - that wouldn't be the proper word to
describe tonight's performance. This wasn't the surface level sexy
moves that makes so many of the women scream. This was - I don't know
the word for this - Barry was sending out vibes with that song that
would have made anyone take notice.
I don't remember exactly where in the show it happened, but at one point
Barry made a comment that he felt like he should be playing in a
speedo! Met with screams, of course.
And then came the Mayflower medley - and what a medley it was - puts the
old Mayflower medley to shame! It was really more than a medley - as
one friend put it, it was like a Broadway production. In most cases, we
got the entire song.
Oh, and Barry wore that great black leather jacket that we all love for
the segment.
This is where I'm really going to have a hard time expressing myself.
I've never seen anything like this - both in terms of the music,
choreography and overall production, and also in terms of Barry's
performance. I'm not going to try to get the songs in the proper order
- I'm just going to write about them as they occur to me.
The backups are featured heavily in this segment. I don't know who came
up with the concepts and choreography for each of these songs, but they
deserve whatever kind of award people get for that. The performances
were entertaining, funny, passionate, heartrending.
They performed Do You Know Who's Living Next Door and Come Monday.
Those who saw the medley during Music and Passion will remember that
Monica and Melanie were featured during the song - this time all 4
backups were featured, as well as selected band members. They had new
outfits, casual, yet sultry.
Barry sang Border Train. This is where it really, really hit me. You
know, Barry "performs" all of his songs - he exudes emotion and passion
and he pulls us in right along with him. But his performances of these
songs that are "his" - he lived these songs tonight. It didn't feel
like a performance - it felt like you were really living it right along
with him. To say he put his heart and soul into it really doesn't
describe it. Saying he was emotional or passionate doesn't describe
it. Barry was "TRUE" - it felt totally true to his music, his craft,
his life. He took it all to the next level - it was deeper than
performing - it was deeper than trying to do a good job for the fan club
and celebrities in the audience. My interpretation is that this was
Barry being totally immersed in what HE believes in, in HIS work.
During this segment of the show, I found myself being brought to tears
on several occasions. But it wasn't because of a great performance of a
powerful lyric that I could somehow associate to my own life - it was
because I was seeing Barry truly enjoy what HE has created. I was
overwhelmed by the energy that he was putting forth, and also by the
pride I have for him when I get to see this side of him. To say this
was a special event doesn't cover it.
When Here at the Mayflower first came out, I didn't get some of the
songs. That's not unusual - I think that's pretty typical - it has
happened with other CDs, too. But it has ALWAYS been the case that when
I got to see Barry perform the song live, he made me understand. Border
Train is one of those songs. I really didn't care for it on the CD.
But I most certainly loved what I saw last night. As I said before,
this is where it really hit me - Barry was living that song, he was
totally immersed in it.
We got the Hot Stuff (with Signed, Sealed, Delivered) medley. They
changed it up a little. Keely isn't on the piano, she's off to the
right side of the stage. We also got They Dance, changed up just
slightly - complete with BAMs.
We got Not What You See - always one of my favorites. This is the one
that so totally knocked me off my feet in New Orleans in 2002. Barry
made the joke about having to turn into an old man for the song - and
how that wasn't hard to do these days. Before he put on the hat, he
groaned and said, "My hair!!!!" Made everyone laugh. He was on the far
side of the stage, so I didn't get as many good photos as I would like
(hope he does it again tonight). It was a fantastic performance - I
really think the best I've seen of that song. He performed that one on
the main stage, but off to the right side. It was also really neat the
way he started the song as the old man, and then jumps back to today's
Barry as he leaps from the keyboard in the middle of the song - and then
just as abruptly, turns back into the old man and shuffles back to the
keyboard. I also thought it was very interesting and kind of poignant
how when he was shuffling back and singing "I'm not what you see" he was
pointing at himself. Yeah, we know Barry - you're so much more...
They did The Night That Tito Played again. This is another one I didn't
care much for until I saw it live - and now I love it. The "set" for
this was really cool. Kye is sitting off to the side, playing on a
"drum". Monica and Melanie are kind of lounging with drinks in their
hand. On a side note, one of the great parts of this Mayflower segment
is all of the backdrops - apartment buildings, windows hanging from the
ceiling, "scenes" displayed on the screen behind them - really very
effective.
Freddie Said was priceless - as far as putting together a concept with
choreography, this was the best. It was entertaining, and it was
hilarious. Kye was Freddie - and throughout the song he would sneak
across the stage, taking notes secretly. His costume was fantastic - is
that what you call a zoot suit? It was white with dark, vertical
stripes. Might have been the same one that he wore when they were
performing Dancing Fool. The girls costumes were very similar, if not
the same to what they wore in the old 40's segment (Music and Passion).
At the point in the song where Freddie sees a shadow in the alley,
something is thrown from off stage, and Kye jumps up and runs in the
other direction. And at the bada-boom part of the song, Kye falls out
dead on the stage, holding up a RIP sign. The girls are dancing and
reacting throughout all of this. Tons of fun!
On the right side of the stage (side stage area), they set up a keyboard
and Barry and Keely came out. I couldn't believe what I was hearing -
he sang Sandra. You could hear the gasps from the fans in the audience
- most of us have never heard that sung live. The way they performed
it, Barry was the narrator - he sang the parts telling the story of
Sandra. But when it came to the part in the song where Sandra is
speaking, Keely took over and sang that part. She was fantastic. She
put so much feeling into the lyrics of the song. It was really
breathtaking and I'm sure it brought tears to a lot of people's eyes - I
know it did mine.
Then Barry came to the left side of the stage to do Talk to Me. It
started out with Kye and Monica at center stage arguing, fighting,
yelling at each other. They pace back and forth across the stage,
shouting (we can't hear what they're saying, you can just tell). And in
the meantime, Barry had come to the left side stage area. And he
yelled, "STOP!" It really got your attention - it was so forceful - it
made me catch my breath for a moment. And Kye and Monica stop and just
stare at him, then they silently walk off stage as Barry sits down at a
coffee table there. The emotion in the air was incredible. He didn't
stay there for the full song, he walked to center stage after the first
verse. He really acted the song out and made it very believable. It
was also a fantastic performance - this one put out an incredible amount
of feeling.
We also got Turn the Radio Up. Everyone was on their feet for this one,
fans and civilians included. I noticed that a lot of fans started out
singing the song along with Barry - we used to do that during the 2002 tour.
Barry closed out the segment with Welcome Home. At first, it was just
Barry alone, with the curtain down behind him. Then the backups come
out to the side stage area - Keely and Kye on the left, and Monica and
Melanie on the right - with suitcases in hand, as if they were "coming
home". As the song ended, they were all hugging each other. That one
brought tears to my eyes, too.
I can't believe that the civilians wouldn't embrace the Mayflower
segment in the show. I know this isn't the "hits" - but it rivals any
Broadway type performance on the strip. I did love the decades medley -
but this was so, so much better. I hope at least some of this segment
stays in the show after the convention weekend is over.
After Welcome Home, Barry and the backups met at center stage for bows.
Then the curtain came down and we got the baby Barry video of Mandy.
Barry came out in my favorite white jacket (of course!) to sing
Mandy/Could It Be Magic - and then they went straight into Copacabana.
At the top of the stairs, Barry was doing funny dances for us again.
I'm not sure what was going on up on the platform, but there was a lot
of laughing going on.
This was one of those shows where you couldn't be sad when it was over.
It was extra long. And Barry and crew put so much into it - you left on
a high. It was a very special night. And if Barry felt from the crowd
what I did, he should very pleased.
May 25 2009.
Barry Manilow is returning to the UK...
Headlining the BBC Proms In The Park...
Hyde Park, London - Saturday 12th September 2009
Uniting the nation in song, the world famous Last Night of the Proms is one of the hottest tickets in the musical calendar. And if you're looking for the best way to enjoy
it, just head to Hyde Park with, flags, family and friends, where for £25.00 you'll get five hours of music and entertainment, a sensational firework finale and BARRY!
To get your tickets now for Barry's only 2009 UK performance:
Online
By Phone
From the Royal Albert Hall - 0845 401 5040 (9.00am - 9.00pm) or See Tickets - 0844 412 4630
In Person
From the Royal Albert Hall (Door 12, 9.00am- 9.00pm
Tickets are priced at £25.00 (under-3s free) plus booking fee online/phone only
Family and Friends ticket offer: buy 7 tickets and get the 8th free.
May 22 2009.
Manilow.TV
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Each month they’ll arrive on line…….and you’ll be able to watch until your heart’s content….
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classics…..GUARANTEED.
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Check in soon for details on exactly how Manilow.TV…..The Internet Television
Subscription Service….will work.
See you on the telly!!!!!
May 21 2009
Exclusive: Barry Manilow discusses fan club concert and Hilton plans
by;Robin Leach
Recording superstar and Hilton headliner Barry Manilow says he faces two dilemmas, and he might not solve the more pressing one until he walks onstage this weekend. From Friday through Sunday
of Memorial Day weekend, Barry plays host to the annual International Barry Manilow Fan Club Convention at the Hilton.
Thousands of fans are traveling here from across the U.S. and Canada and as far away as Britain and Australia. Barry knows they will be here to listen to his incredible collection of hits, but
instead he wants to treat them to a special performance of his personal favorite album Here at the Mayflower, which critics have hailed as the finest album of his career.
Barry admits that he’s torn. In a rare, exclusive one-on-one interview, he told me: “When I walk onstage at the Hilton, I’ve got 90 minutes of show time. That’s still not even long enough to
fit in every one of my hits that they’ve come to hear live, and yet if I do At the Mayflower for them, that will take up a good third of the time. Depending how the fans react when I walk on, I’ll feel it in my
gut and make the decision right then of what to do. We’ve rehearsed the entire show with Mayflower, so we can do all of it or some of it and balance with some of the hits. I’ve no idea what will happen or what
we’ll do until that very moment.”
Mayflower is about a Brooklyn apartment building where Barry grew up. “That was the life I had back then,” he told me as we sat at the counter of a dressing room kitchen-bar. “I
wanted to tell stories in song of what was behind each door in the building. I got the best reviews of my life for it, and it is a very special memory and part of my life. My other favorite is 2 a.m. Paradise Cafe,
which was my first jazz album. We had Sarah Vaughan, Mel Torme, Shelley Mann and Jerry Mulligan on it. Of all the records, those are my two personal favorites. Don’t get me wrong. I love the hits. Every one of them has a
different meaning and memory for me. I still love singing and playing them. I will never get tired of them.”
Barry has recorded 42 albums and sold 80 million records during his extraordinary career of some 50 chart hits dating back to “Mandy” in 1974, “I Write the Songs” in 1975 and “Copacabana” in
1978. At one point, he had five albums on the charts simultaneously.
I go back with Barry to his early days in New York City some 40-plus years ago when he gave piano lessons and played for aspiring singers, all well before he played backup for Bette Midler at
the Continental Baths. He supplemented his income back then with radio and TV commercials.
“Here I was in New York. I’d gone to the New York College of Music and Julliard, and the nice Jewish boy from Brooklyn had to pay his rent. So I got into the jingle jungle, where I learned
everything about catchy melodies. I can still remember the words to Band-Aid and State Farm and even the Toilet Bowl blues! But it was the McDonald’s ‘Take a Break Today’ that paid the most money.
“Jingles changed my life. My very first one was for Dodge. I brought it in at 3 minutes 45 seconds, and the advertising agency sent me back to cut it down to 30 seconds and not lose the
melody! That took some discipline, but I did it, and it taught me everything I know about my songs, the pop hits. It changed my life, and for the rest of time, I knew how to write catchy music and words. If you can nail
a melody and a message in a 15- or 30-second commercial, you can write the songs that people sing! I learned so much doing the jingles, arranging and orchestrating the singers. It’s a total art, and I had people like
Valerie Simpson, Melissa Manchester and Ron Dante on my first jingle as unknown backup studio singers, and they all went on to stardom in their own right.
“I took that into the pop world, and it’s extraordinary when you think of all the education I had about music and piano and even giving lessons, I learned the most from being in the music
jingle industry! I am so happy it happened, and Mom would be very proud of where it took me. She was so proud she even wore a sign around her neck at my early concerts, “I am Barry Manilow’s Mom.”
Barry’s last TV spot was a Bank of America commercial 10 years ago, and he reminded me that his music for a State Farm insurance spot from 30 years ago still plays today! “Don’t be surprised
if somebody takes the old ‘Up, Up and Away’ song for a Viagra commercial one day soon,” he joked.
I asked Barry about his other dilemma -- what he’ll do when his contract with the Hilton is up this fall. He started there in February 2005. “I hope they want me to renew. We have such great
audiences at the Hilton. Being there on our schedule keeps me off the road. I certainly don’t want to retire. I love Las Vegas, and the Hilton treats me and our audiences so well. I don’t want to go anywhere else, and
there’s no stopping me. Retirement is a dirty word, and I’ve got so much more to give and do. This summer I’ll be working on my next two albums.”
Barry, who will celebrate his 66th birthday June 17, summed up: “You know I’m still the kid from Brooklyn who wants to work hard to pay the bills, so I am going to keep on working.”
May 14 2009.
Manilow Concert Alert: Barry at the Hollywood Bowl!
Get ready LA….
It’s A Night To Remember…..
Barry At The Bowl…….
An amazing night under the stars at the amazing Hollywood Bowl….
It’s Barry….
His band…..
His singers…..
His favorite orchestra…..
A few surprises…….
And enough hits to fill…….a bowl.
Mark your calendars for a gorgeous Saturday Night….October 24th.
And get ready for A Night To Remember……
BMIFC Tickets go on sale this Friday (May 15) at 10 AM (Pacific) at www.starz.bz/bmifc or by calling
310.957.5788.
.
Front Row tickets are available NOW at
www.FrontRowManilow.com!
Max
April 24 2009
http://barrymanilow-nl.ning.com/profiles/blogs/barry-manilow-newzz-april-24 April 12 2009. Barry Manilow's pledge will bring 45 violins to local schools
By Theresa Goffredo
Herald Writer
The gift also means that elementary students on the Tulalip Reservation will have a strings program for the first time ever.
The launch of the Prelude Strings program is scheduled for September and is geared to fourth- and fifth-graders at Tulalip Elementary School and Hawthorne Elementary School in Everett.
"For these students to have an opportunity to play string instruments themselves will be a dream come true," Hawthorne Elementary music teacher Rochelle Dean said.
Those violins from Manilow came about through someone using their influence to pull a few strings.
That someone was Harvey Platt, CEO of Beaverton, Ore.-based Platt Electrical Supply, which has a branch in Everett. Turns out Platt knows Manilow and his people. Platt also knew that Manilow had in the past donated
musical instruments to schools. So after Platt learned that instruments were needed locally, he wrote to Manilow's people with an it-couldn't-hurt attitude.
Two or three days before Manilow's March 15 concert in Everett, Platt found out about the donation.
"It was my desire and Barry Manilow's desire that these instruments only go where they are needed," Platt said in a phone call from San Diego. "This is no publicity stunt."
Without the donation of these violins, the strings program in Everett, which was discontinued back in 1984, could not be kick-started.
Another key element the program couldn't do without is a conductor.
Ron Friesen, assistant conductor with the Everett Symphony, is retired now. He has the time and the support of the symphony to lead the Prelude Strings program and has volunteered to head it as its teacher and
coordinator.
He's also got a personal stake in a strings program.
Friesen, a 32-year veteran music teacher and band director, wanted to start a strings program back in the late 1980s in the Stanwood School District. He never forgot what the district board's president told him at the
time.
"The exact words were: 'If a big district like Everett can't keep a string program going, we don't think we can run one in Stanwood,' " Friesen recalled. "That has stuck in my craw for 21 years."
Friesen, who has lived in the Marysville School District since 1975, has heard the stories over the years about the kids at Tulalip Elementary who were expected to fail.
As he started on this journey for a strings program at Tulalip, Friesen, as he likes to say, had skin in this game.
"I came from a very poor family. I got scholarships from local places from people who believed in me and it's those people who put me where I am today, living virtually a dream life," Friesen said. "Now, it's my turn to
give back."
Friesen will be solely responsible for teaching the Prelude Strings program twice a week, at noon at Tulalip and after school at Hawthorne. The instruments will be turned over to the students at no charge. If the
instrument is lost, stolen or damaged, the student doesn't have to pay but gives up the chance to learn.
Though the logistics of the program are mostly worked out and all await arrival of the violins in September, a question still must be asked: Can the Prelude Strings program be sustained?
Allison Larsen, Everett School District's humanities curriculum specialist and the cog that linked all the players of Prelude Strings together, said she sees this as the seed that gets it all started.
So far, Prelude Strings hasn't cost anything because Friesen is donating his time. But at 59, he said he can't volunteer forever and needs to be able to point to a salary when he's recruiting his replacement.
The risk of starting a program like this, Friesen said, is having its curtain drop.
"It's one thing to volunteer something, but the risk is not being able to follow through. The disappointment outweighs the advantage to having the opportunity in the first place," Friesen said. "It's a big concern. I'm
hoping the community becomes aware of what we are trying to do, and they will see the value and support it."
sourse; Haroldnet.com
March 16, 2009. Last Night: Barry Manilow at the Everett Events Center
Like so many things that shape one's life, the first concert a child sees can have a strong influence on his or her musical taste as an adult. Mine was Barry Manilow at Mercer Arena at the age
of eight (or thereabouts), and while my profession requires that I exhibit an appreciation for tunes on the cultural vanguard, to this day, nothing revs my engine like a soft, chewy ballad — and I blame that on Barry
(and my parents, I suppose, as I wasn't exactly clamoring like a Hannah Montana-obsessed little girl to go to the show).
Last night, prior to Manilow's concert, a rare break from
his ongoing Vegas residency to raise money for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, an adult companion and I ate pizza and played skee-ball at the Lynnwood Chuck E. Cheese — the sort of thing I might have done when I was
eight. The Manilow show was a fish out of water experience as well, as we were among the few people in attendance who weren't 60-year-old female "Manilovers," who shrieked like the aforementioned Hannah Montana addicts
every time a smile crept across Barry's surgically-preserved face. If the guy were interested in more than a platonic relationship with these fans — one of whom could be found plastering letters that spelled "Manilow
Girl" on her car's front windshield in the Travelodge parking lot before the show — well, he'd have been chin deep.
With a few heartfelt breaks for Barry to recognize the cause he was crooning for, and to thank the fans for showing up in such tough economic times, the show was, to the note, a precise
replica of the "Ultimate Manilow" script he follows at the Vegas Hilton. The only track he played off his newish '80s cover album was "Islands in the Stream." On the album, he's joined by Reba McEntire. In concert, his
four backup singers shared the female vocal. The effect wasn't as seductively cat-and-mouse as when Rogers and Parton first collaborated on the tune, but like all things Manilow, there wasn't a flat note hit.
Say what you want about Manilow, but there are few male vocalists possessing of pipes so limber and pitch-perfect. Also an ultra-skilled pianist and composer, Manilow's got a point when he
says there's never been anyone like him — equal parts Liberace and Bennett, he's as multi-dimensional as they
come. And to see Manilow in concert is to be reminded — surprised, even — at the sheer number of hits the guy has charted
over the past 35 years.
His 90-minute set was taut and breathless, leaving little to no room for spontaneous banter and artistic improvisation. "Mandy" began with a 1975 clip of Manilow playing on a gigantic round
screen at center stage. After the first verse-chorus interchange, the real Manilow took over for the younger, video Manilow. Interspersed throughout "I Made It Through the Rain" were anecdotes of Manilow's youth in
Brooklyn, when his granddad would take him into Manhattan and plug a quarter into a booth that would record wee Barry singing whatever he wanted. Manilow thanksed his grandpa for being the lone member of his family to
recognize his musicality at an early age.
Canned and schmaltzy as the Manilow experience can be in some respects, it is ultimately incredibly fulfilling. For one, Manilow gives every crowd a show, the consummate old-school
performer who feels as though every audience member should feel like they've gotten more than their money's worth. Late in the show, stripped of his orchestra and backing vocalists, Manilow sat on a stool at the front of
the stage, belting out a spare, emotional version of "Somewhere Down the Road." Here, Manilow hid behind nothing, reminding everyone in attendance that behind all the glitz and number-one hits, what got him where he is
today is talent, pure and simple.
February 25 2009
Manilow Returns for the 5th dynamic year as Hilton headliner febr.26
Superstar
Barry Manilow,
(http://www.broadwayworld.com/people/Barry_Manilow/) who has made the Las Vegas Hilton his home since February 23, 2005, returns to kick off his fifth year February 26-28 in the legendary Hilton Theater.
"Barry Manilow's talent and catalog of hits makes him an exceptional entertainer who has no peer," said Rudy Prieto, CEO and general manager of
the Las Vegas Hilton. "While many performers rest on their laurels, Manilow continues to show that his creativity never stops."
Manilow began his long-term engagement with the Hilton in 2005 with "Manilow: Music and Passion." His new show "Ultimate Manilow: The Hits"
debuted in the July of 2008. "ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits" is packed with chart-topping music spanning his spectacular career, and gives fans an opportunity to enjoy decades of Manilow's hits and his amazing showmanship.
An added bonus to Manilow's performances is the "Ultimate Bar," a working bar located inside the Hilton Theater that features many of Manilow's
gold and platinum records from his personal collection and great career photos. The Manilow Store, located inside the Hilton, features the infamous Copacabana jacket and dozens of Manilow products.
Manilow began his long-term engagement with the Las Vegas Hilton after more than three decades of performing and a career that has produced more
than 50 albums.
Manilow performs at the Las Vegas Hilton through 2009, generally on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays at 8 p.m. in the legendary Hilton Theater.
Stage seat tickets are $225 (plus tax and service charge). The seats are up close and personal with 34 located on each side of the stage and at the same level. Main orchestra tickets are $145-175 (plus tax and service
charge); rear orchestra tickets $96-$125 (plus tax and service charge) and balcony $115 (plus tax and service charge).
Tickets can be purchased at the Las Vegas Hilton box office, online at
www.lvhilton.com, www.vegas.com.
www.ticketmaster.com or by calling 702-732-5755 or 1-800-222-5361.
February 23 2009
CLIO to Honor Manilow, 'Mad Men' Creator

NEW YORK The
CLIO Awards will present its first honorary statues to Barry Manilow and Mad Men show creator/producer Matthew Weiner for their contributions to the
advertising industry at its 50th anniversary gathering at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino May 12-14 in Las Vegas.
Weiner will accept an honorary statue during the Communications Awards on May 12, a 1960s-themed evening featuring Billboard pop hits, Rat Pack entertainment and ad imagery from the Mad Med era. Manilow will receive his
award at The Moving Image Awards on Thursday, May 14, which is a tribute to the '70s, a decade in which he won two CLIOs.
Manilow was the co-recipient of a CLIO award in 1976 for Best Television/Cinema composer for Band Aids' "Stuck On Me" (Young & Rubicam, New York) and another that same year as a performer/voice for Best Radio
(international) for Tab's "Countdown" (McCann Erickson, Toronto).
The 2009 CLIO chairs are Rob Reilly, partner/co-executive creative director at Crispin Porter + Bogusky, Boulder, Colo./Miami, (content and contact category); Stefan Sagmeister, president of Sagmeister Inc., New York,
(design); Nick Law, CCO for North America, R/GA, New York, (interactive); Marcello Serpa, general creative director for AlmapBBDO, Sao Paulo, Brazil, (print/poster/innovative media/integrated campaign); Michelle Curran,
president of Amber Music, London, (technique); and Mark Tutssel, CCO at Leo Burnett Worldwide, Chicago, (television/cinema/digital).
Richard Edelman, president and CEO of Edelman, New York, will be the executive chair for the public relations award category, which was added this year.
The CLIO Awards are produced by Nielsen Business Media, which is part of the Nielsen Co. (as is Adweek).
February 22. 2009
The Steve Chase Humanitarian Awards took a page from the Palm Springs International Film Festival script
Saturday with the most star-studded gala in its 15-year history.
But some of these honorees sang.
Barry Manilow and actresses Bebe Neuwirth and Kristin Chenoweth were among the honorees. Presenters included actor B.D. Wong, Poz Magazine Editor Regan Hofmann and
Suzanne Somers, who made a surprise appearance to present Manilow with the Silver Anniversary Community Service Award. TV stars Morgan Fairchild, Linda Gray and Donna Mills were hostesses. Tony Award-winning actress
Diahann Carroll, an Emmy nominee last year for “Grey's Anatomy,” entertained.
But, before Carroll could sing a note, Chenoweth wowed the crowd singing the old standard, “You'll Never Know,” dedicated to her college music instructor, who died of
AIDS. Then Manilow sang a song that had just been played in Australia as part of its national day of mourning following their deadly fires, “One Voice,” which
applies to just about any good cause.
The focus of this evening in the Palm Springs Convention Center was the Desert AIDS Project's 25-year battle against AIDS.
Attendance was 1,350 — short of its record of 1,650 set three years ago, but sponsorships increased, thanks partly to a $150,000 title sponsorship by co-chairman Jim
Casey's Integrated Wealth Management. Casey said they generated $100,000 more than last year's record of $1.1 million, not counting the live and what was expected to be the largest silent auction ever.
“The DAP has come a long ways since volunteers like Steve Chase persuaded (McDonald's hamburger mogul) Joan Kroc to gift us with the money that built our first medical clinic,” added
Curtis Ringness, Desert AIDS Project board president. “Today, we offer care, prevention and advocacy services to an area roughly the size of Massachusetts.”
Manilow, one of the first celebrities to support the AIDS battle as the performer at Elizabeth Taylor's first AIDS benefit, said he had never received an
award for his community work.
“I'm so happy to finally receive an award where I don't have to thank Clive Davis,” he joked about his long-time record label chief.
“This is a community and this is my community. I'm so happy to be here. ... I've met the greatest people here, from the waitresses at El Mirasol ... I just love it. This community has changed
my life.”
Dr. Anthony Fauci, one of the government's leading AIDS researchers and head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was perhaps the face of this
AIDS campaign. He earned the Presidential Medal of Freedom last year for creating the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief to treat and prevent HIV infections in African and the Caribbean.
Hofmann, who was infected with HIV by her boyfriend 12 years ago, called Fauci “the model for all of us who rage against the frustrations of this virus.”
Fauci said before the gala Congress should vote this spring on a $48 billion appropriation bill to continue PEPFAR. Neuwirth and Chenoweth shared the Arts and Activism Award.
Bill Jones, recipient of the Partners for Life Award, recalled how the first gala named after Chase, a philanthropic interior designer who died of AIDS, drew “maybe 100
guests.” This year, he noted, “there must be 120 working volunteers.”
DAP volunteer Harriet Goldberg received the 100 Women Award, saying, “If we are ever going to defeat HIV and AIDS, education and prevention are the name of the game.”
The DAP serves more than 2,300 individuals and provides services to 30 to 40 new clients a month.
February 18. 2009
Manilow's activism leads to Chase award
By Bruce Fessier • The Desert Sun

This isn’t just a trip to the People’s Choice Awards for Barry Manilow.
When the Palm Springs-based musical icon receives his Community Service recognition Saturday at the black-tie Steve Chase Humanitarian Awards, he’ll bring with him a personal
awareness of the AIDS pandemic and the work the Desert AIDS Project has been doing to combat the disease in the Coachella Valley.
“I’ve had four personal assistants in my career since the ’70s,” the singer-songwriter said in a most sobering tone, “and three out of the four have died of AIDS.
My personal assistants have always become my best friends. They are my brothers.”
Manilow has actively fought against AIDS since the earliest signs of its magnitude.
His foundation, the Manilow Fund for Health and Hope, supports such AIDS organizations as Aid for AIDS of Nevada, the AIDS Project Los Angeles, AIDS Research Alliance of America and the AIDS
Walk of Los Angeles, to name just a few.
His friend, Desert AIDS Project AP board member Kevin Bass, who nominated the singer Manilow for the Steve Chase honor, said Manilow became one of the first celebrities to support the cause
when Elizabeth Taylor asked him to perform at benefit dinner to combat AIDS after other artists refused.
“Certainly, the face of AIDS has changed,” said Bass, “but, at the time, Barry stepped to the plate and performed.”
Manilow said in an exclusive interview from his South Palm Springs home that Taylor called him in the early 1980s.
“Her friend Rock Hudson had died,” he said. “She was the first one to try to make the public aware of this disease that was infecting everybody and she was throwing a big dinner party. She
called her entertainer friends and they all turned her down. I don’t know why. But I got the call and said ‘Of course.’
"But my band wasn’t around. I just went there and played piano and sang for a good hour. It was the first one she had and it was the first time I had ever done anything like that.”
After the Taylor benefit, Manilow said AIDS organizations around the country began seeking his involvement.
Bass asked him to accept a Steve Chase award while visiting his Palm Springs house.
Normally, the Community Service Award goes to a non-celebrity, but Bass said Manilow seemed an ideal choice.
“For his community service to the McCallum Theatre, to the AIDS Assistance Program, to Gay Assisted Youth, and on the heels of his donating instruments to all the
middle and high schools last year, I just thought the Community Service Award was absolutely perfect for him,” Bass said. “Both co-chairs, Jim Casey and Barbara Keller, agreed.”
Manilow was “excited and very touched” by his selection, said Bass, and he asked for a tour of the DAP offices in Palm Springs in the middle of a work day to view the
efforts of its staff and volunteers.
“Barry understands he's being honored for his community service work,” Bass said. “But, he also wanted to have a strong personal connection to the Desert AIDS Project.
It's not something he took lightly, like, ‘OK, I'll show up, I'll get an award and I'll walk out.' That's not who Barry is. Barry said, ‘If I'm going to accept an award, I need to know who's giving it to me.'
“He was so impressed and so moved by the brilliant work that goes on there.”
Manilow said he doesn't feel like he's on a mission, as perhaps U2's Bono does, to alert the world to the danger of AIDS or the availability of treatments for it.
“I haven't got the words,” he said. “All I can do is raise as much money for as many of the charities (as) I can.”
But he said he thinks the United States should support AIDS organizations in this country and around the world.“I
wish President Obama the greatest of luck,” he said. “If it were up to me, I would raise money for all of them. No one is more important than another. People are people. We should be trying to help them all.”
February 14, 2009
BARRY Manilow is a lot like his creation "Mandy" - you know, the kind of person who gives "without taking."
Come Valentine's Day, Manilow will be giving it away in a benefit concert for Stand Up for a Cure, donating all proceeds from that Nassau Coliseum concert to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation.
Speaking to The Post from his Palm Springs, Calif. home, Manilow joked about the frequency with which he donates his talents: "I say yes to everybody; if you ask me, I'm there.
"This concert is really important to me," he adds seriously. "I can't tell you how many women I know and love who've been diagnosed with breast cancer."
Brooklyn-born Manilow, who studied at Juilliard and was a CBS Records mailroom slave before he hit the big time, believes he has responsibility to his fans. Especially the women, who have always melted for
his love songs - and his charitable involvement with kids.
But Citizen Manilow is troubled these days.
"What bothers me most is that schools are cutting out music and drama departments," he laments."
It seems that's true even in posh Palm Springs, where the local school system was cutting back on the arts. "I was upset. I saw what they were doing, so I bought them instruments to continue the music
program."
Recalling his youth, Manilow, 65, says, "When I was growing up in Brooklyn, I don't know what would have happened to me without the music lessons. I was a shy kid, I was an average student, but as soon as
I started taking music lessons, I got better with people. My grades improved, and I found my passion."
And that passion was for writing, performing and producing music that has an emphasis on love.
When asked about the best era for the love song, the crooner didn't hesitate. "Oh, the '50s," he says. "The '50s songwriters were just beginning to make melodies rock. The songs still had clever lyrics and
gorgeous melodies."
Those are the same elements Manilow attempts to bring to his music.
"I've had a career where I lucked into having sung and written some really great love songs like 'Even Now,' 'This One's for You,' and 'Weekend in New England.' I think these are beautiful songs, and I'm
proud to have
written them."
He also believes his music is very romantic. "I'll be doing as many of these songs as I can when I play the Nassau Valentines Day show."
While Manilow is a romantic, he doesn't kiss and tell. "I've got one really big surprise aimed at it being a Valentine's Day show," he says. "I won't give it away, but I guarantee it will be a really
romantic moment."
For us he-men who have trouble showing our romantic, sensitive side, Barry offers a Cupid-like tip: "If you want to romance your date, try holding hands when I sing 'Weekend in New England.' I hear that
works for most guys."
February 7th 2009. BY RICK MASSIMO-http://www.projo.com
Barry Manilow, done with oldies, has album of new songs in the works
Barry Manilow had surprising success in the past few years with recorded retrospectives of the greatest hits of the ’50s, ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, but he says he’s through looking back.
“I’ve gotta get back to writing my own stuff,” the multiplatinum-selling singer says. “This has been a lot of fun, and it’s great that it’s always been successful, but I’m done.”
Manilow’s The Greatest Songs of the Eighties came out in November, and it followed the criteria for the previous retrospective albums — the songs had to have been number-one pop hits and they had to have
melodies that stuck out for Manilow. So the ’80s compilation features Manilow’s takes on classics such as “Open Arms,” “Never Gonna Give You Up” and “Time After Time,” with mostly straightforward productions and
Manilow’s voice, which is as strong as ever.
Manilow says that the whole idea of doing that kind of looking back wasn’t his, anyway; it was label head Clive Davis’ — “I would never in a million years do anything like this,” he says. “I’ve fought
[Davis] on every single song he’s given me,” Manilow says, but since Davis was the one who encouraged Manilow to record a little ditty called “Mandy” back in 1974 — you may have heard of it — Manilow always gives Davis’
ideas a listen.
That’s how The Greatest Songs of the Fifties came to be, and when that disc was a smash, it made sense to keep going. But no more.
Manilow says that as he has worked through the decades, he’s found that melody gradually took a back seat to the rhythm. “The rhythm got much more aggressive, as people got into computers and drum
machines. But what I kept looking for was the melody. Little by little, the melody kept taking a back seat.”
He adds that “I doubt very much that I [could] go into the ’90s, because there was very little melody in the ’90s,” and although he admits he thought that about the ’80s before he started wading into the
music, he’s also done with looking back simply because he’s ready to do a record of his own songs.
Next up for Manilow is a new original album, and while he’s still writing the songs for it, he says of the tunes he’s done so far that “It’s more of a rock ’n’ roll album than I’ve ever done. …
“If you dig into my earlier albums, you’ll see that there are a lot of moments where I try to break the rules and go away from the adult-contemporary world, into some aggressive, guitar-driven songs. I
really loved writing them, and I don’t think I sound too bad on them.”
Now, though, the priority is another road jaunt, which have been getting shorter and scarcer over the years.
Manilow’s been doing a greatest-hits show in Las Vegas for three years, and he calls Vegas “home.” He doesn’t go on the road for extended jaunts anymore; short trips are more his speed. He recently got
back from four nights in London, and says, “As long as it wasn’t a month-long tour, I was able to handle that.”
Sure, but at age 65 and with a successful show in your adopted backyard, why go on the road at all?
The key, he says, is in the titles of the Vegas show and the road show. The Hilton shows are called “Ultimate Manilow: The Hits”; the road show is called “Ultimate Manilow: The Hits … and Then Some.”
“The audiences in Vegas, it’s finally gotten to what they warned me about: no fans, or a handful of fans, and the rest are strangers. Sold out, but strangers. And they want to hear the hits. So I can’t be
too inventive at the Hilton.”
On the road, he says, he gets to play for more dedicated fans, so he can stretch out beyond his 39 Top 40 hits. “They know my work, but they can’t afford to drag themselves to Vegas. So I can be more
inventive in my shows on the road. And I will. And I do. I sing songs on the road that I don’t do in Vegas.”
But that’s not all Manilow is working on. “I’ve got such a list of projects,” he says. “It’s always been excellent for me,” and some of them may finally be bearing fruit.
Manilow says his latest musical, Harmony, about the true story of the Comedian Harmonists, a German singing group that found international acclaim before being forced to break up by the Nazi regime, is
progressing apace. He’s found a producer who has the show booked in three theaters outside New York this fall. When it’s pointed out that he said the same thing in an interview five years ago, he agrees and says, “I’ll
believe this all when I see it.”
Manilow’s other passion these days is his Manilow Music Project, a charitable foundation that, among other things, brings musical instruments back into public schools. Recently, he bought $500,000 worth of
instruments for every school in the Coachella Valley, and he hopes to have a similar effort at each of his road stops starting later this year.
“It was so rewarding to all of us.… You wouldn’t believe the letters I’m getting about these bands in these schools — playing music again!”
Getting musical instruments back in kids’ hands is crucial, Manilow says; he remembers his own childhood when he testifies to the importance of music.
“I don’t know what I would have done if I hadn’t had some of that. Forget about becoming famous or making records; I don’t know what I would have done as a person if I hadn’t landed in the band. That was
my social life. My other grades got better! I know that’s what happens to these young people.”
December 4th 2008
Barry Manilow Nomintated for a Grammy...
Nominations for the 2008 Grammy Awards were announced on December 3, as part of a special concert aired on CBS.
The nominees for Best Musical Show Album are Gypsy, In the Heights, The Little Mermaid, South Pacific, and Young Frankenstein.
Nominees for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album are Still Unforgettable by Natalie Cole, The Sinatra Project by Michael Feinstein, Noël by Josh Groban, In The Swing Of Christmas by
Barry Manilow

and Rufus Does Judy At Carnegie Hall by Rufus Wainwright.
November 25,2008 The desert sun today..
Barry adapts ‘Manilow sound' for '80s tunes
“The Greatest Songs of the Eighties” won't win Barry Manilow many young new fans. But, for Manilow CD collectors jonesing for a new
product, “The Greatest Songs of the Eighties” will provide a rush of euphoria.
One of Manilow's greatest assets is his skill as an arranger who knows the “Manilow sound” and how to achieve it. His own preference may be to adapt to a Johnny Mercer lyric, but he respects the ear of
co-producer Clive Davis, who he calls “the Albert Einstein of music” on the disc's liner notes, and he accepts Davis' feel for the type of material Manilow fans will like.
With those parameters, Manilow has chosen melodic pop hits such as Stevie Wonder's “I Just Called To Say I Love You,” Cyndi Lauper's “Time After Time” and Van Morrison's “Have I Told You Lately.”
The opening track, a cover of the Kenny Rogers-Dolly Parton hit, “Islands in the Stream” with Reba McEntire, is the kind of smart merger you wish our government could come up with for the stock market.
The song that best utilizes the Manilow formula of power modulations is probably his solo rendering of the Bill Medley-Jennifer Warnes hit, “(I've Had) the Time of My Life.”
The biggest miss is “Have I Told You Lately,” which lacks Morrison's ethereal quality.
But this “decades” CD uses that Manilow formula more appropriately than any since his No. 1, “Greatest Songs of the Fifties.”
Rick Astley's “Never Gonna Give You Up” could become a high-energy dance production in Manilow's Vegas show.
Manilow could have juxtaposed the order of these songs better to give them another layer of meaning, but he'll do that in his Vegas show.
This is supposedly Manilow's last “decade” CD, but we'll be listening to his varying interpretations in his live performances.
November 25,2008
Pull out your 2009 calendar…
“ULTIMATE MANILOW: The Hits…and then some” is headed East in February!
BMIFC tickets for the following dates will go on sale on Wednesday, November 26 at
10 AM (Pacific):
February 4 – Verizon Wireless Arena – Manchester, NH
February 5 – Wachovia Arena – Wilkes Barre, PA
February 11 – Dunkin’ Donuts Center – Providence, RI
February 12 – Sovereign Center – Reading, PA
BMIFC members can get tickets at
www.starz.bz/bmifc or by calling
310.957.5788.
Please note that the BMIFC office will be closed on Thursday and Friday for the
Thanksgiving Holiday.
November 18,2008
BARRY MANILOW’S NEW ALBUM GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES RELEASE DATE MOVES UP TO MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24TH
• THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE FIFTIES (#1 DEBUT, 2006)
• THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE SIXTIES (#2 DEBUT, 2006)
• THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE SEVENTIES (#4 DEBUT, 2007)
Classics from the ’80s – “Islands in the Stream” duet with Reba McEntire, “Never Gonna Give You Up,” “Careless Whisper,” “I Just Called to Say I Love You,” “Arthur's Theme (The Best That You Can
Do),” “Time After Time,” “I've Had the Time of My Life,” “Against All Odds (Take A Look At Me Now),” AND MORE
(New York - November 17, 2008) Due to popular demand and the Thanksgiving holiday, Grammy, Tony, and Emmy Award-winning Arista recording artist Barry Manilow will be releasing his new
album, THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES, in stores a day early on Monday, November 24th on Arista Records.
Barry Manilow is scheduled to debut material from GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES live tonight on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, on QVC’s QSessions Live at 8pm on
November 20th Live from the Las Vegas Hilton, The Today Show on November 28th, 4 consecutive nights of appearances on Entertainment Tonight beginning November 24th, and on December 12th, he will be
appearing on The Ellen DeGeneres Show and Jimmy Kimmel Live.
THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES is Manilow’s newest addition to the mega-best-selling series of tribute albums that he masterminded with Arista founder Clive Davis. Davis has been
Manilow’s hitmaking collaborator on virtually all his recordings, since they first worked together on “Mandy,” his debut #1 single as the first artist signed to Arista by Davis in 1974, the first year of the label’s
existence. THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES continues the series that began nearly three years ago with The Greatest Songs Of The Fifties, which was certified RIAA platinum after
entering the Billboard 200 at #1 in January 2006 (his first #1 album since Barry Manilow/Live in 1977). The Greatest Songs Of The Sixties (October 2006) entered at #2. When the RIAA platinum
The Greatest Songs Of The Seventies entered at #4 (September 2007), he was distinguished as the only artist to chart three Top 5 debuts during 2006-2007.
BARRY MANILOW: THE GREATEST SONGS OF THE EIGHTIES
“Islands in the Stream” duet with Reba McEntire
“Open Arms”
“Never Gonna Give You Up”
“Have I Told You Lately”
“I Just Called to Say I Love You”
“Against All Odds (Take A Look At Me Now)”
“Careless Whisper”
“Right Here Waiting” ;
“Arthur's Theme (The Best That You Can Do)”
“Hard to Say I'm Sorry”
“Time After Time”
“I've Had the Time of My Life
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