Burt Bacharach
1928-2023
Composer Burt Bacharach died this past week at the age of 94. In addition to being extremely talented (how's that for an understatement?), Bacharach was handsome and witty, which made him a regular on the talk show circuit in the 1960's and -70's, thus, he was more familiar to the general public than contemporary composers were. Plus, he was married to Angie Dickinson, and how's that for glamorous?
There are a handful of songwriters and composers who one can say provided a soundtrack to an Era, the Sixties and Seventies in this case. Lennon and McCartney, Paul Simon, Brian Wilson for sure, but Burt Bachaharch is certainly among them. Along with his lyricist partner Hal David, the hits that Bacharach produced are too numerous to list here (many of them sung by the great Dionna Warwick), but let's just throw a few of them out there, in no particular order:
Alfie
The Look of Love
What the the World Needs Now
Do You Know The Way to San Jose
Promises, Promises
I'll Never Fall in Love Again
Walk On By
Always Something there To Remind Me
Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head (He and David won an Oscar for that one)
I could go on and on, but you get the idea. Also, the orchestrations and arrangements of a Bacharach song are unique and totally recognizable. A few bars in, and you know that "That is a Burt Bacharach song."
Bacharach won seven Grammys in his career and three Oscars, he was nominated for Tony Awards, and received the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song.
In addition to the Oscar for Original Song, "Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head" from Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid, Bacharach won an Oscar for Best Original Score for that same film, and I want to share some of that memorable music with you. THIS ONE is the music that played over the opening credits.
Then there is the music to the SOUTH AMERICAN GETAWAY sequence. This clip is a bit lenghty, over 5 minutes long, but worth hearing just to see the full range of what Bacharach did for that fabulous movie. And like I said earlier, you hear it and just know that "that's Burt Bacharach."
We may never see - or hear - his like again.
RIP Burt Bacharach.
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