Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Some People's Lives

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Released
  
September 4, 1990

Length
  
43:56

Artist
  
Bette Midler

Label
  
Atlantic Records

Genre
  
Pop music

Recorded
  
1990

Some People's Lives (1990)
  
For the Boys (1991)

Release date
  
4 September 1990

Producer
  
Arif Mardin

Some People's Lives httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaendd3Som

Similar
  
Bette Midler albums, Pop music albums

Bette midler some people s lives complete album


Some People's Lives is the seventh studio album by American singer Bette Midler, released on the Atlantic Records label in 1990. It contains one of her biggest hits, "From a Distance", which won the songwriter Julie Gold a Grammy Award for Song of the Year in 1991.

Contents

The Some People's Lives album became one of the biggest commercial successes of Midler's musical career, peaking at number 6 in the US and number 5 in the UK and it was later awarded double platinum by the RIAA for sales of over two million copies in the US alone. It has sold 7 million copies worldwide.

Some peoples lives bette midler


Composition

Following a series of successful Hollywood movies made throughout the 1980s, among them Down and Out in Beverly Hills, Ruthless People, Outrageous Fortune, Oliver and Company and Big Business, Midler returned to the music scene with a proper studio album in 1990, her first since 1983's rock and new wave-influenced No Frills. Some People's Lives however had more in common with the preceding soundtrack Beaches in that it featured both interpretations of jazz standards like "Miss Otis Regrets", "Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most" and "He Was Too Good to Me" as well as more chart-oriented pop and adult contemporary material with contrasting synth-driven arrangements courtesy of producer Arif Mardin, his son Joe and Robbie Buchanan. The up-tempo track "Moonlight Dancing" (first recorded by pop/R&B group The Pointer Sisters) was written by noted hitmaker Diane Warren and "The Gift of Love" by Tom Kelly and Billy Steinberg, the team behind Madonna's "Like a Virgin", Cyndi Lauper's "True Colors" and The Bangles' "Eternal Flame".

Singles

"Moonlight Dancing" (also released as an extended dance remix which sampled the 1973 recording "Do You Want to Dance"), "Night and Day" and "The Gift of Love" were all issued as singles, but the biggest hit that the album produced was undoubtedly Midler's interpretation of Julie Gold's anthem of universal brotherhood "From a Distance" featuring The Radio Choir of New Hope Church, paradoxically released shortly before the breakout of the first Persian Gulf War. The single reached number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, number 1 on the Adult Contemporary chart and number 6 in the UK and was later certified platinum in the US, making it Midler's second million-seller within the space of two years following "Wind Beneath My Wings" from the Beaches soundtrack. The song has since been recorded by a large number of other artists and Midler herself included an alternate version with partly re-written lyrics on her 2006 album Cool Yule.

Track listing

  1. "One More Round" (Jessica Harper, Danny Sembello, Allee Willis) – 2:03
  2. "Some People's Lives" (Rhonda Fleming, Janis Ian) – 3:29
  3. "Miss Otis Regrets" (Cole Porter) – 2:51
  4. "Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most" (Fran Landesman, Tommy Wolf) – 5:30
  5. "Night and Day" (Billie Hughes, Roxanne Seeman) – 5:30
  6. "The Girl Is On to You" (Jude Johnstone) – 4:10
  7. "From a Distance" (Julie Gold) – 4:37
  8. "Moonlight Dancing" (Diane Warren) – 4:39
  9. "He Was Too Good to Me" / "Since You Stayed Here" (Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart) / (Peter Larson, Josh Rubins) – 4:12
  10. "All of a Sudden" (Nathalie Archangel, Scott Wilk) – 4:33
  11. "The Gift of Love" (Tom Kelly, Billy Steinberg, Susanna Hoffs) – 4:02

Personnel

  • Bette Midler – lead vocals, backing vocals
  • Charlotte Crossley – backing vocals
  • Ula Hedwig – backing vocals
  • Cissy Houston – backing vocals
  • Tom Kelly – backing vocals
  • Jo Ann Harris – backing vocals
  • David Lasley – backing vocals
  • George Merrill – backing vocals
  • Myrna Smith – backing vocals
  • Eugene VanBuren – backing vocals
  • Maria Vidal – backing vocals
  • John West – backing vocals
  • The Radio Choir of New Hope Church – backing vocals
  • Grady Tate – drums
  • Carlos Vega – drums
  • Gary Coleman – percussion
  • Steve Kroon – percussion
  • Ron Carter – bass guitar
  • Jay Leonhart – bass
  • Neil Stubenhaus – bass
  • Gene Bertoncini – guitar
  • Andrew Gold – guitar
  • Michael Landau – guitar
  • John McCurry – guitar
  • Dean Parks – guitar
  • Bernie Layton – piano
  • Marc Shaiman – piano
  • Michael Boddicker – synthesizer
  • Robbie Buchanan – keyboards, programming
  • Joe Mardin – keyboards, programming, backing vocals
  • Guy Roche – programming
  • Andy Snitzer – saxophone, soprano saxophone
  • Nino Tempo – tenor saxophone
  • Phil Bodner – clarinet
  • Bruce Dukov – concertmaster
  • Gene Orloff – concertmaster
  • Sid Page – concertmaster
  • Production

  • Arif Mardin – record producer, musical arranger, musical conductor, orchestral arrangements
  • Marc Shaiman – arranger, conductor, associate producer, vocal arrangements, rhythm arrangements
  • Gene Orloff – conductor
  • Joe Mardin – arranger, engineer, mixing
  • Robbie Buchanan – arranger
  • Steve Skinner – arranger
  • Billie Hughes – arranger
  • Tom Kelly – vocal arrangement
  • Jack Joseph Puig – engineer
  • Nick Sansano – engineer, mixing
  • Eddie Garcia – engineer, mixing
  • Michael O'Reilly – engineer, mixing
  • Jamey Staub – assistant engineer
  • Anthony Saunders – assistant engineer
  • Gabriel Moffat – assistant engineer
  • Clif Norrell – assistant engineer
  • Bob Loftus – assistant engineer
  • Ed Korengo – assistant engineer
  • Rob Harvey – assistant engineer
  • Ken Felton – assistant engineer
  • Doug Sax – mastering
  • Marsha Burns – production coordination
  • Lisa Maldonado – coordination
  • Vicky Germaise – coordination
  • Greg Gorman – photography
  • Bob Defrin – art direction
  • Songs

    1One More Round2:03
    2Some People's Lives3:30
    3Miss Otis Regrets2:52

    References

    Some People's Lives Wikipedia