Cover of Tom Waits & Crystal Gayle One From The Heart
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For fans of tom waits,lovers of film soundtracks,enthusiasts of american standards and sentimental music,followers of francis ford coppola’s films,music collectors interested in eclectic albums
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THE REVIEW

This record contains the tracks written by Waits for Francis Ford Coppola's film "One from the Heart" (in Italy "Un sogno lungo un giorno").

And it met a similar fate.

Francis, overwhelmed by the box office flop, had to regain the trust of producers, and Tom, despite garnering an Oscar nomination, spent the period following the film's release justifying to his more traditionalist fans the easy listening slip.

It was a misunderstanding for both.

The movie is delightful, and Coppola gently moves the camera, sliding into the artificial city that captures the sentimental stories of the Forrest-Garr couple.

And Tom, with an elegance that escaped many, captures the film's key moments by borrowing the style from the great American sentimental song, with affectionate tributes to Cole Porter and Duke Ellington.

The female voice (the "compromised" Crystal Gayle), far from being a disappointing sugary concession, represents the necessary female perspective of the story.

Splendid, airy, the title track, top-notch melodic solutions in many tracks (Is There Any Way Out of This Dream? - Picking Up After You - Old Boyfriends), and rightfully famous is Broken Bicycles, one of the very few tracks from the record that remained in live performances.

Ellington smiles behind I Beg Your Pardon, and even more unsettling and singularly anticipatory of future sounds is You Can't Unring a Bell.

My personal opinion is that disregarding the reason for writing these pieces, that is, the commentary on a film, ultimately undermines their evaluation.

Obviously, the tracks are "genre" because the intent was precisely to recreate a certain aroma of past musicals.

Proof that Tom did nothing but immerse himself in a specific context is the musical wave of that period. A couple of years earlier, there was the gritty and raw blues of the outstanding "Heartattack and Vine," and the following year, the epochal turn of "Swordfishtrombone" would come. As if to say, nothing could be further from this deliberate cinematic sentimentalism.

In my opinion, not a fall at all (as it has been written), but a brilliant demonstration of the eclecticism of this great artist.

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Summary by Bot

This review explores Tom Waits and Crystal Gayle’s soundtrack for Coppola’s film One From The Heart, highlighting its elegant homage to classic American sentimental songs. Despite initial criticism and commercial failure, the album showcases Waits’ eclecticism and ability to capture cinematic moods. Gayle’s vocals provide a necessary female perspective. The record stands as a successful and distinctive artistic project within Waits’ diverse discography.

Tom Waits & Crystal Gayle

A credited collaboration for the soundtrack One From The Heart (1982), pairing Tom Waits — an American singer-songwriter noted for eclectic, often cinematic work — and Crystal Gayle — an American country singer. The album was written for Francis Ford Coppola's film.
02 Reviews

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By De-cano

 Waits and his friend Gayle lead it, who duet in various songs and are capable of enchanting momentarily.

 Goodbye Los Angeles, goodbye night hawk, goodbye late and crooked serenades, open your eyes to a new, fantastic, abstract, angular world.