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Тексты песен Tony Bennett

Tony Bennett - The Shadow Of Your Smile
18 дня назад 298,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - If I Ruled The World (feat. Celine Dion)
4 минуты назад 323,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - I Left My Heart In San Francisco (feat. Bill Charlap)
18 дня назад 293,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - How Do You Keep The Music Playing? (feat. George Michael)
2 дня назад 365,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - I Wanna Be Around (feat. Bono)
3 дня назад 317,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - The Good Life (feat. Billy Joel)
2 дня назад 271,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - Sing You Sinners (feat. John Legend)
16 дня назад 239,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - Just In Time (feat. Michael Buble)
4 минуты назад 250,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - Because Of You
18 дня назад 232,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - Are You Havin' Any Fun? (feat. Elvis Costello)
4 минуты назад 235,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - For Once In My Life (feat. Stevie Wonder)
18 дня назад 246,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - The Best Is Yet To Come (feat. Diana Krall)
18 дня назад 241,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - Cold, Cold Heart
18 дня назад 238,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - Lullaby Of Broadway (feat. Dixie Chicks)
18 дня назад 272,00 (не задано)
TONY BENNETT - The Very Thought Of You (feat. Paul McCartney)
18 дня назад 274,00 (не задано)

Информация о артисте

В 50-е годы он неподражаемо пел баллады и вокальный джаз, в 60-е совмещал джазовые и поп-стандарты с популярными мелодиями из мюзиклов, в 80-е, кода ему перевалило за шестьдесят, он так сладко исполнял поп-классику, что пережил всплеск невероятной популярности, а в 90-е годы собрал основной урожай высших музыкальных наград. В 2000-е, сам артист на пороге своего 80-летнего юбилея записывает альбом за альбомом, регулярно появляется на церемониях награждения и целиком оправдывает давний комплимент Фрэнка Синатры: "Тони Беннетт - лучший певец в шоу-бизнесе".

Лучшим образом петь лучшие песни своего времени - несложный девиз, который Тони Беннетт (Tony Bennett) взял на вооружение на заре туманной юности и который превратил его жизнь в почти пятидесятилетний фейерверк успехов. Времена менялись, на смену одним лучшим песням приходили другие, а Тони Беннетт, как профессиональный дамский угодник, всегда знал, как понравиться публике.

Энтони Доминик Бенедетто (Anthony Dominick Benedetto) родился 3 августа 1926 года в нью-йоркском районе Квинс. Джон Бенедетто (John Benedetto), итальянский эмигрант, на родине - портной, в Америке - бакалейщик, и его жена Анна растили троих детей. Энтони было десять лет, когда отца не стало, мать пошла работать швеей, но ее заработка катастрофически не хватало. Фактически с этого времени и началась музыкальная карьера Энтони Доминика, который уже в самом нежном возрасте проявил свои недюжинные дарования. У него был пример для подражания: его старший брат, певший в известном детском хоре Metropolitan Opera, готовился стать профессиональным артистом. В 1936 году 10-летний Энтони дебютировал перед публикой, выступив на церемонии открытия нового моста и стоя на сцене рядом с мэром Нью-Йорка Фиорелло Ла Гардиа (Fiorello La Guardia).

Кроме пения, которому он учился, слушая пластинки джазовых исполнителей и своего любимого Фрэнка Синатры, Тони страстно увлекался рисованием. Несколько лет он проучился в Высшей школе прикладного искусства (сейчас это Школа живописи и дизайна), но всегда чувствовал, что его призвание - сцена. В 16 лет он бросил учебу, так и не получив диплом художника, и начал зарабатывать первые трудовые копейки, чтобы поддерживать семью. Отдушиной для него были выступления в любительских музыкальных шоу. В 1944 году, когда Энтони исполнилось 18, пришла его очередь обрить голову, облачиться в военную форму и отправиться в Европу выполнять союзнический долг на полях Второй мировой войны.

Энтони демобилизовался в 1946 году с твердым намерением посвятить себя музыке. Современную вокальную технику он изучал в профессиональной школе при театре American Theater Wing. Первым местом, где парень смог воплотить теорию на практике, стало кафе в отеле "Astoria". Здесь же он подрабатывал лифтером, чтобы как-то сводить концы с концами. Мало-помалу Бенедетто, придумавший себе сценический псевдоним Джо Бари (Joe Bari), начал появляться в телешоу, делить сцену с известными исполнителями. К концу 40-х он уже нанял собственного менеджера и осваивал концертные площадки Нью-Йорка и окрестностей.

Петь бы ему так по барам и кафе до самой пенсии, если бы не комедиант Боб Хоуп (Bob Hope), которому довелось как-то услышать выступление Энтони на разогреве у Перл Бейли (Pearl Bailey) и который вскоре пригласил его в свое эстрадное шоу. С его подачи в 1950 году Энтони Доминик Бенедетто заодно с Джоном Бари окончательно превратились в Тони Беннетта, который записал демо-версию "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" и передал ее директору Columbia Records. Вскоре Беннетт уже числился среди подопечных Columbia, и механизм по производству хитов был запущен в действие.

Во главу угла, по тогдашней традиции, ставились не полноформатные альбомы, а отдельные синглы. Первый хит Тони Беннетта "Because of You" возглавил американский хит-парад в сентябре 1951 года. За ним последовал еще один лидер продаж - кавер-версия песни Хэнка Уильямса (Hank Williams) "Cold, Cold Heart". За первые два года своей сольной карьеры Беннетт записал еще пять синглов, пользовавшихся несомненной популярностью. В конце 1953 года появился еще один хит #1 - композиция "Rags to Riches", за ним еще один - "Stranger in Paradise", мелодия из бродвейского мюзикла "Kismet". В горячей десятке 1954 года финишировали две новые кавер-версии Хэнка Уильямса: "There'll Be No Teardrops Tonight" и "Cinnamon Sinner".

Во второй половине 50-х намечавшееся лидерство Тони Беннетта на поп-Олимпе слегка пошатнулось - надвигалось рок-н-ролльное безумие, и бороться с ним в одиночку было делом почти непосильным. Артист не стал примерять на себя модный рок-имидж, а предпочел остаться первоклассным поп-джазовым вокалистом. Публика платила ему искренней любовью и твердой монетой из своих кошельков. С 1955 года Columbia открывает счет полноформатным альбомам Тони Беннетта, выпустив первую сольную пластинку "Cloud 7". Через два года певец подготовил лонг-плей "Tony" (1957), который впервые вписал его имя в американский рейтинг альбомов и сразу под 14-м номером. Тогда же в радиоэфире зазвучал сингл "In the Middle of an Island", покоривший 9-ю строчку хит-парада.

В это время Тони Беннетт много выступает в ночных клубах, превращается в одного из самых привлекательных клубных артистов, широко используя в своих программах поп-классику и начиная глубоко интересоваться джазом. Первое доказательство такого интереса - альбом 1957 года "The Beat of My Heart", записанный в сопровождении лучших джазовых перкуссионистов того времени. В 1958 году эстафету подхватила совместная работа с Каунтом Бейси "Basie Swings, Bennett Sings", в 59-м - концертный альбом "In Person With Count Basie and His Orchestra".

50-е сменились 60-ми, меломаны, увлеченные новомодными веяниями, несколько охладели к Тони Беннетту. Его синглы уже не получают былого отклика, зато как концертный исполнитель он не знает простоев и пустых залов, выстраивая свои программы, а заодно и студийные релизы на основе джазовых и поп-стандартов - пользуясь рецептом, который никогда не подводил Фрэнка Синатру. Дискография Беннетта обновляется буквально раз в три-четыре месяца, только в 1959 году выходит семь новых пластинок. Почти с такой же активностью студийная работа кипит и на протяжении 60-х.

Ключевым в вызревании легенды Тони Беннетта стал 1962 год. Два никому неизвестных молодых автора, Джордж Кори (George Cory) и Дуглас Кросс (Douglass Cross), передали аккомпаниатору Беннетта пианисту Ральфу Шарону (Ralph Sharon) одну из своих песен с просьбой показать ее маэстро. Маэстро посмотрел. И украсил свой каталог композицией "I Left My Heart in San Francisco". Хотя песня не стала коммерческой сенсацией, она благополучно засветилась в Тор 20 и около девяти месяцев они фигурировала в разных рейтингах, разойдясь полуторамиллионным тиражом. А самое главное, она стала визитной карточкой Беннетта, самой узнаваемой и любимой песней в его каталоге. Она же гарантировала успех одноименной пластинке, которая финишировала на пятой строчке хит-парада. Она навеки вписала имя музыканта в число номинантов Grammy. Сингл "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" был назван лучшей записью года, а Беннетт впервые удостоился лавров лучшего поп-вокалиста.

Творческая биография Тони Беннетта вышла на новый виток. Следующий студийный альбом "I Wanna Be Around" (1963) вызвал широкий резонанс, засветился под пятым номером в поп-чарте и запустил в Тор 20 два сингла: "The Good Life" и "I Wanna Be Around". Вообще редкая пластинка артиста (а их в 60-е годы вышло два с половиной десятка) проходит мимо внимания публики, его имя почти не исчезает из первой сотни хит-парада. Синглы мелькают в рейтингах продаж косяками, пик приходится на 1963-1967 годы, когда полтора десятка треков Беннетта поднялись в первую сотню хитов. Артист исполняет не только оригинальный материал и поп-классику, но и темы из мюзиклов: "Who Can I Turn to (When Nobody Needs Me)" из бродвейского мюзикла "The Roar of the Greasepaint, the Smell of the Crowd", тему из музыкального спектакля "Pickwick" "If I Ruled the World" и другие.

К концу 60-х неравная борьба музыканты с новыми веяниями начинает давать сбои. В 1968-м году его альбом "Snowfall/The Tony Bennett Christmas Album" в последний раз добирается до 10-й позиции хит-парада. В это время руководство Columbia переключает внимание на все более юную аудиторию, а тинейджеры 60-х слушают рок - это самый прибыльный и перспективный сектор музыкального рынка. С подачи руководства Columbia Беннетт решается прощупать эту неизведанную почву и записывает современный поп-рок. Но 40-летний певец не в силах тягаться с юными рок-идолами. Лонг-плей 1970 года "Tony Sings the Great Hits of Today!" мелькнул где-то во второй сотне поп-альбомов и нисколько не изменил коммерческую ситуацию.

В 1972 году Тони Беннетт расстался с Columbia, не желая переключаться на легковесные современные поп-хиты, и доверил свою карьеру MGM Records. Сотрудничество не заладилось, и к середине 70-х музыкант оказался предоставлен самому себе. Тогда, чтобы больше ни от кого не зависеть и ни под кого не подстраиваться, он создал собственную рекординговую компанию Improv. Несколько пластинок, изданных его лейблом, не принесли ожидаемого всплеска популярности. Хотя были среди них и очень интересные работы, например дуэт с джазовым пианистом Биллом Эвансом "The Tony Bennett Bill Evans Album" (1975). В 1977 году лейбл Improv закрылся.

К этому времени 50-летний артист по большому счету мог спокойно обойтись без хитов. Чтобы собирать полные залы по всему миру, его песни могли и не звучать целыми днями по радио. Собственно, из тех полутора десятка студийных и концертных пластинок, которые появились в каталоге Беннетта в 70-е годы, в рейтингах продаж отметились единицы. Все это время у Тони Беннетта была отдушина, поддерживавшая его в самые сложные моменты - занятия живописью. Юношеское хобби переросло во вторую профессию и занимало все свободное время. В 1977 году Беннетт приятно озадачил своих поклонников, открыв первую персональную художественную выставку в Чикаго. Через два года он выставил свои лучшие работы в Лондоне.

В 80-е годы его положение на современной сцене принципиально не изменилось, разве что новых релизов стало в три раза меньше. Однако к концу десятилетия меломанов, которых кормили то панками, то металлистами, то хип-хопперами, снова потянуло на хорошую поп-музыку. В 1986 году Тони Беннетт вернулся под крыло лейбла Columbia и подготовил альбом поп-стандартов "The Art of Excellence", посвященный джазовой певице Мейбел Мерсер (Mabel Mercer) и впервые с 1972 года засветившийся в хит-параде. Следующей выходит компиляция лучших песен авторства Ирвина Берлина "Bennett/Berlin" (1987). А в 1990 году появляется автобиографический альбом "Astoria: Portrait of the Artist".

Менеджером артиста становится его сын Дэнни (Danny). При его поддержке 60-летний певец отваживается наладить контакт с абсолютно новой для себя публикой - аудиторией канала MTV. Не меняя репертуара и тем более манеры исполнения, облаченный в экзотический по тем временам фрак, Тони Беннетт снимает несколько видео на классические поп-хиты. И, как ни странно, это сработало. В начале 90-х Беннетт возвращает себе почти такую же популярность, какая была у него тридцать лет назад. Прекрасные альбомы начала 90-х, трибьют Фрэнку Синатре 1992 года "Perfectly Frank" и трибьют Фреду Астеру (Fred Astaire) "Steppin' Out", изданный в 1993 году, возглавили джазовый рейтинг, разойдясь полумиллионным тиражом каждый. Более того, после 30-летнего перерыва музыкант снова оказался в числе лауреатов Grammy, два года подряд получая награду за лучший традиционный поп-вокал.

Вообще в том, что касается наград и знаков внимания со стороны музиндустрии, 90-е годы - самые урожайные в его биографии. В 1994 году на церемонии вручения Grammy Беннетту аплодируют дважды. Его новый диск "MTV Unplugged" назван альбомом года, а сам певец - обладателем лучшего традиционного поп-вокала. Можно сказать, что на стыке 20 и 21 веков не было в Америке поп-вокалиста, более титулованного, чем Тони Беннетт: в этой категории на церемонии вручения Grammy он побеждал еще четыре раза - в 1996, 97, 99 и 2002-м годах. В 1995 году он принимает заслуженную награду за достижения на протяжении всей карьеры на церемонии World Music Аwards. Почти каждый его релиз за последние 15 лет не обходится без награды, включая трибьют Билли Холидэй "On Holiday" и Дюку Эллингтону "Bennett Sings Ellington: Hot & Cool", а также альбом дуэтов "Playin' with My Friends: Bennett Sings the Blues", записанный при участии Стиви Уандера, Би Би Кинга, Рэя Чарльза и других звезд.

В 2002-м году Беннетт записал совместный альбом с Кей Ди Лэнг (k.d. lang) "A Wonderful World", признанный лучшим вокальным поп-альбомом по версии Grammy. В 2004-м году вышел новый лонг-плей "The Art of Romance", в 2005-м - совместная работа с Каунтом Бейси "Jazz After Hours with Tony Bennett & Count Basie".

А впереди еще масса планов и проектов. "Мне нужно как минимум две жизни, - говорит сегодня патриарх американской поп-музыки, - чтобы реализовать все свои творческие идеи, сделать все, что я задумал, и узнать то, чего я еще не знаю. Я никогда не остановлюсь". Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Tony Bennett (born Anthony Dominick Benedetto on August 3, 1926) is an American singer of popular music, standards and jazz. After having achieved artistic and commercial success in the 1950s and early 1960s, his career suffered an extended downturn during the height of the rock music era. Bennett staged a remarkable comeback, however, in the late 1980s and 1990s, expanding his audience to a younger generation while keeping his musical style intact. He remains a popular and critically praised recording artist and concert performer in the 2010s.

Bennett is also an accomplished painter, creating works under his birth name, Anthony Benedetto.

Early life
Anthony Benedetto was born in Astoria, Queens, New York City, the son of Ann (née Suraci) and John Benedetto.[1] His father was a grocer who had emigrated from Podàrgoni, a rural eastern district of the southern Italian city of Reggio Calabria, and his mother was a seamstress.[2] With two other children and a father who was ailing and unable to work, the family grew up in poverty.[3] John Benedetto died when Anthony was 10 years old.[3]

The young Benedetto grew up listening to Al Jolson, Eddie Cantor, Judy Garland and Bing Crosby as well as jazz artists such as Louis Armstrong, Jack Teagarden and Joe Venuti. An uncle was a tap dancer in vaudeville, giving him an early window into show business.[4] By age 10 he was already singing and performed at the opening of the Triborough Bridge.[5] Drawing and caricatures were also an early passion of his.[3] He attended New York's High School of Industrial Art where he studied painting and music,[2] but dropped out at age 16 to help support his family.[6] He then set his sights on a professional singing career, performing as a singing waiter in several Queens Italian restaurants.[7]

World War II and after
His singing career was interrupted when Benedetto was drafted into the United States Army in November 1944 during the final stages of World War II.[3][8] He did basic training at Fort Dix and Fort Robinson, encountering bigotry due to his Italian heritage, and became an infantry rifleman.[9] Processed through the huge Le Havre "repple depple" replacement depot, in January 1945 he was assigned as a replacement infantryman to 255th Infantry Regiment of the 63rd Infantry Division, a unit filling in for heavy losses after the Battle of the Buldge.[10] He moved across France and into Germany,[3] and as March 1945 began he joined the front line and what he would later describe as a "front-row seat in hell."[10]

As the German Army was pushed back into their homeland, Benedetto and his company saw bitter fighting in cold winter conditions, often hunkering down in foxholes as German 88 mm guns fired on them.[11] At the end of March they crossed the Rhine and engaged in dangerous house-to-house, town-to-town fighting to clean out German soldiers;[11] during the first week of April they crossed the Kocher and by the end of the month reached the Danube.[12] During his time in combat, Benedetto narrowly escaped death several times.[3] The experience made him a patriot but also a pacifist;[3] he would later write, "Anybody who thinks that war is romantic obviously hasn't gone through one."[10] At the war's conclusion he was involved in the liberation of a Nazi concentration camp near Landsberg,[3] where some American prisoners of war from the 63rd Division were also freed.[12]

Benedetto stayed in Germany as part of the occupying force, but was assigned to an informal Special Services band unit that would entertain nearby American forces.[3] Later, his dining with a black friend from high school at a time when the Army was still segregated led to his being demoted and reassigned to Graves Registration duties.[13] Subsequently, he sang with the Army military band under the stage name Joe Bari, and played with many musicians who would have post-war careers.

Upon his discharge from the Army and return to the States in 1946, he studied at the American Theater Wing on the GI Bill.[5] He was taught the bel canto singing discipline,[14] which would keep his voice in good shape for his entire career. He continued to perform wherever he could, including while waiting tables.[3] He developed an unusual approach that involved imitating the style and phrasing of other musicians as he sang—such as that of Stan Getz's saxophone and Art Tatum's piano—helping him to improvise as he interpreted a song.[6] He made a few recordings as Bari in 1949 for small Leslie Records, but they failed to sell.[15]

In 1949, Pearl Bailey spotted his talent and asked him to open for her in Greenwich Village.[7] She had invited Bob Hope to the show. Hope decided to bring Bari on the road with him, but suggested he use his real name simplified to Tony Bennett.[15] In 1950, Bennett cut a demo of "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" and was signed to the major Columbia Records label by Mitch Miller.[5]

First successes
Warned by Miller not to imitate Frank Sinatra[4] (who was just then leaving Columbia), Bennett began his career as a crooner singing commercial pop tunes. His first big hit was "Because of You", a ballad produced by Miller with a lush orchestral arrangement from Percy Faith. It started out gaining popularity on jukeboxes, then reached #1 on the pop charts in 1951 and stayed there for 10 weeks,[16] selling over a million copies.[15] This was followed to the top later that year[16] by a similarly-styled rendition of Hank Williams' "Cold, Cold Heart", which helped introduce Williams and country music in general to a wider, more national audience. The Miller and Faith tandem continued to work on all of Bennett's early hits. Bennett's recording of "Blue Velvet" was also very popular and attracted screaming teenage fans at concerts in the famed Paramount Theater in New York (Bennett did 7 shows a day, starting at 10:30 a.m.)[17] and elsewhere.

On February 12, 1952,[18] Bennett married Ohio art student and jazz fan Patricia Beech, whom he had met the previous year after a nightclub performance in Cleveland.[15] Two thousand female fans dressed in black gathered outside the ceremony at New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral in mock mourning.[2] Bennett and Beech would have two sons, D'Andrea (Danny) and Daegal (Dae).

A third #1 came in 1953 with "Rags to Riches." Unlike Bennett's other early hits, this was an up-tempo big band number with a bold, brassy sound and a double tango in the instrumental break; it topped the charts for eight weeks.[16] Later that year Bennett began singing show tunes to make up for a New York newspaper strike; "Stranger in Paradise" from the Broadway show Kismet reached the top, as well as being a #1 hit in the United Kingdom and starting Bennett's career as an international artist.

Once the rock and roll era began in 1955, the dynamic of the music industry changed and it became harder for existing pop singers to do as well commercially.[5] Nevertheless Bennett continued to enjoy success, placing eight songs in the Billboard Top 40 during the latter part of the 1950s, with "In the Middle of an Island" reaching the highest at #9 in 1957.[19]

In 1956, Bennett hosted the television variety show The Tony Bennett Show[20] as a summer replacement for The Perry Como Show.[21]

A growing artistry
In 1954, the guitarist Chuck Wayne became Bennett's musical director.[22] In 1955, Bennett released his first long-playing album, Cloud 7, which showed Bennett's jazz leanings and was billed as featuring Wayne. In 1957, Ralph Sharon became Bennett's pianist and musical director,[23] replacing Wayne. Sharon told Bennett that a career singing "sweet saccharine songs like 'Blue Velvet'" wouldn't last long, and encouraged Bennett to focus even more on his jazz inclinations.[4]

The result was the 1957 album The Beat of My Heart. It used well-known jazz musicians such as Herbie Mann and Nat Adderley, with a strong emphasis on percussion from the likes of Art Blakey, Jo Jones, Latin star Candido, and Chico Hamilton. The album was both popular and critically praised. Bennett followed this by working with the Count Basie Orchestra, becoming the first male pop vocalist to sing with Basie's band. The albums Basie Swings, Bennett Sings (1958) and In Person! (1959) were the well-regarded fruits of this collaboration,[5] with "Chicago" being one of the standout songs.

Bennett also built up the quality and reputation of his nightclub act; in this he was following the path of Sinatra and other top jazz and standards singers of this era.[5] Bennett also appeared on television; he sang on the first night of both the Johnny Carson The Tonight Show and The Merv Griffin Show. In June 1962, Bennett staged a highly-promoted concert performance at Carnegie Hall, using a stellar lineup of musicians including Al Cohn, Kenny Burrell, and Candido, as well as the Ralph Sharon Trio. The concert featured 44 songs, including favorites like "I've Got the World on a String" and "The Best Is Yet To Come." It was a big success, and further cemented Bennett's reputation as a star both at home and abroad.

Also in 1962, Bennett released the song "I Left My Heart in San Francisco." Although this only reached #19 on the Billboard Hot 100,[19] it spent close to a year on various other charts and increased Bennett's exposure.[5] The album of the same title was a top 5 hit[5] and both the single and album achieved gold record status. The song won Grammy Awards for Record of the Year and Best Male Solo Vocal Performance, and over the years would become known as Bennett's signature song.[2][14] In 2001, it was ranked 23rd on an RIAA/NEA list of the most historically significant Songs of the 20th Century.

Bennett's following album, I Wanna Be Around (1963) was also a top 5 success,[5] with the title track and "The Good Life" each reaching the top 20 of the pop singles chart[19] and the top 10 of the Adult Contemporary chart.[24]

The next year brought The Beatles and the British Invasion, and with them still more musical and cultural attention to rock and less to pop, standards, and jazz. Over the next couple of years Bennett had minor hits with several albums and singles based on show tunes – his last top 40 single was the #34 "If I Ruled the World" from Pickwick in 1965[19] – but his commercial fortunes were clearly starting to decline. An attempt to break into acting with a role in the 1966 film The Oscar[20] was not well received.

A firm believer in the American Civil Rights movement,[14] Bennett participated in the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches.[25] Years later he would continue this commitment by refusing to perform in apartheid South Africa.[2]

Years of struggle
Sharon and Bennett parted ways in 1965.[23] There was great pressure on singers such as Lena Horne and Barbra Streisand to record "contemporary" rock songs, and in this vein Columbia Records' Clive Davis suggested that Bennett do the same.[5] Bennett was very reluctant, and when he tried, the results pleased no one. This was exemplified by Tony Sings the Great Hits of Today! (1969),[5] which featured misguided attempts at Beatles and other current songs and a ludicrous psychedelic art cover.[26]

Years later Bennett would recall his dismay at being asked to do contemporary material, comparing it to when his mother was forced to produce a cheap dress. By 1972, he had departed Columbia for MGM Records, but found no more success there, and in a couple more years he was without a recording contract.[5]

Bennett and his wife Patricia had been separated since 1965, their marriage a victim of too much time on the road, among other factors.[2] In 1971, their divorce became official. Bennett had been involved with aspiring actress Sandra Grant since filming The Oscar, and on December 29, 1971 they married.[18] They would have two daughters, Joanna and Antonia.

Taking matters into his own hands, Bennett started his own record company, Improv.[5] He cut some songs that would later become favorites, such as "What is This Thing Called Love?", and made two well-regarded albums with jazz pianist Bill Evans, The Tony Bennett/Bill Evans Album (1975) and Together Again (1976), but by 1977 Improv was out of business. A stint living in England, like other American jazz expatriates, did not change his fortunes.

As the decade neared its end, Bennett had no recording contract, no manager, and was not performing any concerts outside of Las Vegas.[6] His second marriage was failing (they would completely separate in 1979, but not officially divorce until 2007).[27] He had (like many musicians) developed a drug addiction, was living beyond his means, and had the Internal Revenue Service trying to seize his Los Angeles home.[6] He had hit bottom.

Turnaround
After a near-fatal cocaine overdose in 1979, Bennett called his sons Danny and Dae for help. "Look, I'm lost here," he told them. "It seems like people don't want to hear the music I make."[6]

Danny Bennett, an aspiring musician himself, also came to a realization. The band Danny and his brother had started, Quacky Duck and His Barnyard Friends, had foundered and Danny's musical abilities were limited. However he had discovered during this time, that he did have a head for business. His father, on the other hand, had tremendous musical talent but was having trouble sustaining a career from it. Danny signed on as his father's manager.

Danny got his father's expenses under control, moved him back to New York, and began booking him in colleges and small theatres to get him away from a "Vegas" image.[6] Tony Bennett had also reunited with Ralph Sharon as his pianist and musical director.[23] By 1986, Tony Bennett was re-signed to Columbia Records, this time with creative control, and released The Art of Excellence. This became his first album to reach the charts since 1972.[5]

An unexpected audience
By the mid-1980s, the excesses of the disco, punk rock, and new wave eras had given many artists and listeners a greater appreciation for the classic American song. Rock stars such as Linda Ronstadt began recording albums of standards, and such songs began showing up more frequently in movie soundtracks and on television commercials.

Danny Bennett felt strongly that younger audiences, although completely unfamiliar with Tony Bennett, would respond to his music if only given a chance to see and hear it. More crucially, no changes to Tony's appearance (tuxedo), singing style (his own), musical accompaniment (The Ralph Sharon Trio or an orchestra), or song choice (generally the Great American Songbook) were necessary or desirable.[5]

Accordingly, Danny began to book his father on shows with younger audiences, such as David Letterman's talk shows, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, The Simpsons, and various MTV programs.[2][6] The plan worked; as Tony later remembered, "I realized that young people had never heard those songs. Cole Porter, Gershwin – they were like, 'Who wrote that?' To them, it was different. If you're different, you stand out."[6]

During this time, Bennett continued to record, first putting out the acclaimed look back Astoria: Portrait of the Artist (1990), then emphasizing themed albums such as the Sinatra homage Perfectly Frank (1992) and the Fred Astaire tribute Steppin' Out (1993). The latter two both achieved gold status and won Grammys for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance (Bennett's first Grammys since 1962) and further established Bennett as the inheritor of the mantle of a classic American great.

As Bennett was seen at MTV Video Music Awards shows side by side with the likes of the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Flavor Flav, and as his "Steppin' Out With My Baby" video received MTV airplay, it was clear that, as The New York Times said, "Tony Bennett has not just bridged the generation gap, he has demolished it. He has solidly connected with a younger crowd weaned on rock. And there have been no compromises."[28]

The new audience reached its height with Bennett's appearance in 1994 on MTV Unplugged. Featuring guest appearances by rock and country stars Elvis Costello and k.d. lang (both of whom had a profound respect for the standards genre), the show attracted a considerable audience and much media attention. The resulting MTV Unplugged: Tony Bennett album went platinum and, besides taking the Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance Grammy award for the third straight year, also won the top Grammy prize of Album of the Year. At age 68, Tony Bennett had come all the way back.

No retirement
Tony Bennett performing at the Kimmel Center, Philadelphia, September 2005.Since then Bennett has continued to record and tour steadily, doing up to 200 shows a year.[2] In concert Bennett often makes a point of singing one song (usually "Fly Me to the Moon") without any microphone or amplification, demonstrating to younger audience members the lost art of vocal projection. One show, Tony Bennett's Wonderful World: Live From San Francisco, was made into a PBS special. Bennett also created the idea behind, and starred in the first, of the A&E Network's Live By Request series, for which he won an Emmy Award. In addition to numerous television guest performances, Bennett has had cameo appearances as himself in films such as The Scout, Analyze This, and Bruce Almighty. Bennett also published The Good Life: The Autobiography of Tony Bennett in 1998.

A series of albums, often based on themes (Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, blues, duets) have met with good acceptance; Bennett has won seven more Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance or Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album Grammys in the subsequent years, most recently for the year 2006. According to his official biography, Bennett has now sold over 50 million records worldwide during his career.

Tony Bennett's career as a painter has also flourished.[29] He followed up his childhood interest with serious training, work, and museum visits throughout his life. He sketches or paints every day, even of views out of hotel windows when he is on tour. Painting under his real name of Benedetto, he has exhibited his work in numerous galleries and has been commissioned by the Kentucky Derby and the United Nations.[29] His painting "Homage to Hockney" (for his friend David Hockney) is on permanent display at the highly regarded Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, Ohio as is his "Boy on Sailboat, Sydney Bay" at the National Arts Club in Gramercy Park in New York.[29] His paintings have been featured in ARTnews and other magazines, and sell for as much as $40,000.[2] Many of his works were published in the art book Tony Bennett: What My Heart Has Seen in 1996. In 2007, another book involving his paintings, Tony Bennett in the Studio: A Life of Art & Music, became a best-seller among art books.[17]

For his contribution to the recording industry, Tony Bennett was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1560 Vine Street. Bennett was inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame in 1997, was awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2001, and received a lifetime achievement award from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) in 2002. In 2002, Q magazine named Tony Bennett in their list of the "50 Bands To See Before You Die." On December 4, 2005, Bennett was the recipient of a Kennedy Center Honor. Later, a theatrical musical revue of his songs, called I Left My Heart: A Salute to the Music of Tony Bennett was created and featured some of his best-known songs such as "I Left My Heart in San Francisco", "Because of You", and "Wonderful." The following year, Bennett was inducted into the Long Island Music Hall of Fame.

Bennett frequently donates his time to charitable causes, to the extent that he is sometimes nicknamed "Tony Benefit."[30] In April 2002, he joined Michael Jackson, Chris Tucker and former President Bill Clinton in a fundraiser for the Democratic National Committee at New York's Apollo Theater. In the late 1980s, Bennett entered into a long-term romantic relationship with Susan Crow (born c. 1960), a former New York City schoolteacher.[6] Together they founded Exploring the Arts, a charitable organization dedicated to creating, promoting, and supporting arts education. At the same time they founded (and named after Bennett's friend) the Frank Sinatra School of the Arts in Queens, a public high school dedicated to teaching the performing arts, which opened in 2001 and would have a very high graduation rate.[3] It was a tribute in return, for in a 1965 Life magazine interview Sinatra had said that:

"For my money, Tony Bennett is the best singer in the business. He excites me when I watch him. He moves me. He's the singer who gets across what the composer has in mind, and probably a little more."[14]
Danny Bennett continues to be Tony's manager while Dae Bennett is a recording engineer who has worked on a number of Tony's projects and who has opened Bennett Studios in Englewood, New Jersey. Tony's younger daughter Antonia is an aspiring jazz singer.[6]

In August 2006, Bennett turned eighty years old. The birthday itself was an occasion for publicity, which then extended through the rest of the following year, as his album Duets: An American Classic was released, reached his highest placement ever on the albums chart,[5] and garnered two Grammy Awards; concerts were given, including a high-profile one for New York radio station WLTW-FM; a performance made with Christina Aguilera and a comedy sketch made with Alec Baldwin on Saturday Night Live; a Thanksgiving-time, Rob Marshall-directed television special Tony Bennett: An American Classic on NBC, which would win multiple Emmy Awards;[17] receipt of the Billboard Century Award; and guest-mentoring on American Idol season 6 and performing during its finale. He received the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees' Humanitarian Award. Bennett was awarded the National Endowment for the Arts - Jazz Masters Award in 2006, (the highest honors that the United States bestows upon jazz musicians).

On June 21, 2007, Bennett married long-time partner Susan Crow in a civil ceremony in New York.[31] Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.