2:00 AM Paradise Café (Remastered) - Barry Manilow

2:00 AM Paradise Café (Remastered)

Barry Manilow

  • Genre: Pop
  • Release Date: 1984-11-01
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 11

  • ℗ 1984, 1996 Arista Records, Inc.

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Paradise Café Barry Manilow 5:22
2
Where Have You Gone Barry Manilow 4:33
3
Say No More Barry Manilow 4:05
4
Blue (with Sarah Vaughn) Barry Manilow 4:18
5
When October Goes Barry Manilow 3:58
6
What Am I Doin' Here Barry Manilow 3:15
7
Good-Bye My Love Barry Manilow 4:24
8
Big City Blues (with Mel Torm Barry Manilow 4:13
9
When Love Is Gone Barry Manilow 4:16
10
I've Never Been So Low On Love Barry Manilow 4:25
11
Night Song Barry Manilow 6:10

Reviews

  • Still amazing

    5
    By Wes sterling
    I had never been a fan of Barry but purchased this album on vinyl in the 80's. I gave my son my whole vinyl collection and recently remembered this gem. Downloaded now and listening on my BIC Ventura speakers, wow, timeless tunes.
  • Barry's Ultimate Night Music

    5
    By Rockman0007
    If you can"t appreciate how moody and amazing this record is as a complete work, then you're most likely emotionally dead. Manilow in the perfect setting. Definitely included in my music collection all time best list.
  • One of my top 10 albums

    5
    By Leo the goldendoodle
    So far in life, I have come across 6 albums for my top 10 albums of all time (still looking for four more; the other 5 are by U2, Elvis Costello, Miles Davis, Bruce Springsteen, and John Coltrane). I came across this album from an old college roommate circa 1988. I could play it over and over again. I still love it.
  • Manilow does Jazz???????

    5
    By Cubano53
    I was looking around one evening for something new and came across this gem. Very, very nice. I could listen to this album all day.
  • The last, great Manilow album...to date

    5
    By Chistopher Waugh
    I like Barry Manilow. Well, I like his music, anyway; I’ve never met the legendary entertainer, who stepped onto the pop music landscape in 1973, wearing platform boots and a sequined, blue jumpsuit and hasn’t been out of the spotlight since. Now, mind you, I’m not a “Manilooney,” one of the superfans who follow Manilow around the country, show to show, like the “Deadheads” to The Grateful Dead, but I would consider myself at least a rank-and-file fan of “the old songs.” Don’t laugh. You know you stop on “Copacabana” when you’re by yourself in the car. Admit it. And, besides, there’s no shame in appreciating songs adored by ba-jillions. I mean, legions of “Fanilows” can’t be wrong, right? Still a skeptic? Humph! Then don’t take my word for it, let the evidence speak for itself: from 1974 to 1983, Manilow placed 25 songs into Billboard’s Top 40 charts, with three number ones and millions of albums sold in a career that’s lasted almost 40 years. I'll grant that album sales, alone, do not, necessarily, place an artist on a "Must Hear" list, but consider that in the early 70’s, Frank Sinatra reportedly said of Manilow, “He’s next.” Not a bad endorsement. Even Axl Rose, 1980's icon and metal head, purports to have been inspired by Manilow’s first hit, “Mandy.” True story. Look it up. And today, Manilow is undeniably woven into the fabric of popular culture, being lampooned and heralded simultaneously over the years in television shows, like “Night Court,” in the 1980’s and more recently, “Ally McBeal,” “The Simpsons,” and even having his own “theme night” on “American Idol.” Not convinced yet? Sigh…whatever. Bob Dylan agrees with me (Again, true story. Look it up). But while his best-known songs and albums from the 1970’s get most of the attention, in 1984, Manilow quietly recorded what many consider to be his very best album: the smoky, jazzy, barroom-in-the-middle-of-the-night, sleeper, 2:00 A.M. Paradise Café. The album was a change of pace for the adult contemporary superstar, who had spent the previous decade ubiquitous on the radio, but by the early 1980’s, Manilow had sputtered into a rough patch, artistically. While each, new release was hitting the coveted, million sales mark, he was in a holding pattern, creatively, and suddenly, he found his polished pop records playing awkward kid brother in a “Top 40” playground filled with future classics, like The Clash’s “Rock The Casbah,” John “Cougar” Mellencamp’s, “Jack and Diane,” The Human League's, “Don’t You Want Me?” and Joan Jett & The Blackhearts’ “I Love Rock & Roll.” Not likely to compete in the new-wave and rock-dominated radio landscape, Manilow seemed to purposely remove himself from the contest, and the resulting album was one of the most memorable of his career. The concept of Paradise Café started by accident, when Ginger Mercer, the wife of the legendary songwriter, Johnny Mercer, sent Manilow a cache of Mercer’s lyrics, inviting him to compose music to any of the verses that piqued his interest. Manilow obliged, writing the music for the astounding, nostalgia-tinged poem, “When October Goes.” Stemming from that piano masterpiece, Manilow conceived the idea of an entire album of original, jazz-styled songs hovering around the motif of a nightclub at 2 o’clock in the morning, whose customers should have called it a night, but who, for that moment, the skuzzy little bar seems to offer more than whatever is, or whatever isn’t waiting at home. What I also love about this album is the “samey” feeling the melodies have, each riffing off the title track, but also holding their own as individual songs. Manilow recruited legendary jazz musicians to assist on the record, including Gerry Mulligan, Bill Mays, Mundell Lowe, Mel Torme’, and Sarah Vaughan, the latter two sharing vocals on two songs, “Big City Blues,” and “Blue,” respectively. The duets are standouts on the album, and Manilow’s exchanging lines with Torme’ and Vaughan reveals, not a vocal peer, but a fan, enraptured by this once-in-a-lifetime chance to share his songs with the very artists, who inspired him to become a musician in the first place. I posit that Manilow’s contribution to the pop pantheon ended after Paradise Café, and while many thought the album, departure that it was, to be only a brief detour, for the next 35 years and up to present day, he’s never really returned to his pop roots, rarely even recording any of his own compositions. In fact, after Paradise, the musician’s modus operandi was to turn-in album after album of gimmicky, concept records, from swing music to show tunes to big band music, to three Christmas albums, to the horrifyingly contrived series that followed: the “Best Songs Of The 50’s,” “Best Songs Of The 60’s,” “Best Songs Of The 70’s,” “Best Songs Of The 80’s,” Sigh…was their a 90’s iteration? Who knows? Who cares? The albums were an awful dénouement in the oeuvre of a gifted entertainer. but Manilow is in the studio as I write this, working on his next album, which is rumored to harken back to his glory days of the 1970’s. If you’re reading this, Barry, we're all tryin’ to get the feelin’ again. Don’t let us down. Post Script: I argue that the gist of Paradise Cafe', like much of Manilow's career, is more about the love of music than forging "new ground" or pandering to the "hip" rock scene, and over the years, Manilow often showed this hand by singing songs about songs (to wit: “I Write The Songs,” “This One’s For You,” “Beautiful Music,” “The Old Songs,” and I Made It Through The Rain, a #10 hit in 1980, that’s original lyrics lovingly describe the craft of song writing), maybe it was inevitable that Manilow relegate himself to an oldies act, or maybe the music and passion just went out of fashion for him. I guess we have to wait and see…
  • The End Of Phase One

    5
    By a song 4u
    This amazing album of late night jazz was first released in 1984 the remastered in 1996, the remastered sound is sparkling. I remember reading the reviews of this album when first released, the critics loved it. What a turn from disco, radio pop, and big ballads. Art for art's sake is the justification for this album, commercial success wasn't an issue. The jazz greats lended a hand for this project, Sarah Vaughn, Gerry Mulligan, and Mel Torme turned out adding to the "jazz cred" "Blue" is a duet with Sarah Vaughn who was still at the top of her game, "When October Goes" is a classic and was covered by Nancy Wilson and Diane Schuur, both of whom Barry would produce albums, Nancy's masterpiece "With My Lover Beside Me" and Diane Schuur's "Midnight." "Big City Blues" features Mel Torme who comes off a bit strong but not distracting. This album is arranged small ensemble and all the songs are cross-faded to create a feeling of a jam session of sorts after hours. Barry left Arista after this release and signed to RCA and the follow-up to this album is 1985's "Manilow" Barry's turn to techno-pop.
  • Paradise Indeed

    5
    By BossyBookworm
    I've always been a big fan of Barry's, and when "Paradise Cafe" was released, it changed everything. I am only sorry that more people didn't hear this wonderful music, and understand who he truly is: an artist, not just the man in the puffy shirt singing "Copacabana."
  • Paradise to my ears!

    5
    By yoginilight
    The night is new indeed, come on, give it a listen...it'll make you stay a while and have a nightcap. One of my favorites to sing in the car (alone) at the top of my lungs. Sarah Vaughn and The Velvet Fog do wonderful duets with Barry. The mood can be a little downtempo (depressing?) at times, but the last track ends on a sunrise thru my drunken stupor half masted eyelids note. Love it!
  • Masterpiece!

    5
    By TwilightDagger
    I'm primarily into European Metal (Stratovarius, Blind Guardian, Pyramaze, etc), however, I listen to many different genres, as long as there is a great deal of melody. This is one of my favorite albums of all time. The title track and When October Goes are among some of the best songs I have ever heard in my entire life. My friends used to give me flak for being a metalhead and listening to Barry, but when I played this album for them, I ended up getting them into Barry, as well. He has always been one of those performers that is timeless, and will never fade away. A brilliant song-writer, pianist, and vocalist, Barry Manilow is one of the most talented musicians of our time, and this, in my opinion, is his greatest masterpiece.
  • The high point

    5
    By Rich Two
    The absolute high point of Manilow's stellar career, and not one to be missed. If you think you know Manilow, check out these tracks. You will NOT be disappointed!

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