Product Details
I Don't Remember Ever Growing Up

I Don't Remember Ever Growing Up
Andy Williams

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. She's The One
  2. Have You Ever Really Loved A Woman
  3. Every Breath You Take
  4. Have I Told You Lately
  5. I Don't Want To Talk About It
  6. I'll Never Break Your Heart
  7. Desperado
  8. One Sweet Day
  9. Breaking Up Is Hard To Do
  10. Shadow Of Your Smile - Williams, Andy & Chris Botti
  11. Just To See Her
  12. Lady In Red
  13. I Don't Remember Ever Growing Up

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #79181 in Music
  • Released on: 2007-06-18
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .22 pounds

Customer Reviews

80 year old still as good as ever5
People will look at the songs on this album and think old timer singing modern songs.Well it a nutshell that is what it is.
However dont let that put you off,this album is a classic Andy Williams
album and one you should not be without.All the songs are sung with the passion you expect from Andy,orchestration is first class,this must rate as one of his best albums for many a year.Andy dont wait too long to do a follow up.A refreshing classic

Still The Best!5
Andy creates a musical canvas with each selection on this 2006 recorded cd. His voice continues to be as smooth, polished as in the 60's & 70's! His voice is filled with color, texture and emotion as only Andy can interpret a lyric. The title track, "I Don't Remember Ever Growing Up" written by Artie Butler, is a reflective & poignant piece in the classic Williams tradition.Since Andy produced this project himself, the song selection is a personal,cohesive collection of soft-rock & current standards. The arrangements are exquisite as is Andy's interpretation. As in the 70's when Mr. Williams was recording cover versions of the hits of the day, many of Andy's arrangements & performace exceed the original artist version. As always with Andy, this project reflects sincerity, sophistication and class!

A professionally executed album that sadly can't hide Andy's age2
There was a time where Andy Williams's cover of Robbie Williams's "She's The One" would have eclipsed memories of the original, and meant that you only wanted to hear Andy's version. The fact that the version of a singer who, at his best, is inferior to Andy at his best, still comes out on top shows that Andy's voice is, sadly, not what it once was. It's still listenable, still pleasant. But these are uninspired arrangements that sound overproduced. Buy the stuff from the sixties and the seventies, and celebrate a great voice in its prime, not this CD and a shadow of what once was.