Arista
1989
Yo Frankie
About This Album
Despite having written some beautiful songs, Dion's great creative strength has always been as an interpreter and, in that regard, especially as an adapter and assimilator of musical genres. Beginning with his early rock & roll sides, which had the polish of classical recordings, and into the early '60s, when he took a moderately successful pair of early Drifters R&B numbers, "Ruby Baby" and "Drip Drop," and transformed them into white rock & roll without violating their spirit (and making million-sellers out of each in the bargain), he was always intermixing styles, approaches, and sounds into something of his own.
Yo Frankie, released after his induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, was Dion's most contemporary effort up to that time, and one that stood securely with its feet in both the '80s and the '50s. Producer Dave Edmunds took an approach here similar to what Jeff Lynne did with George Harrison and the Traveling Wilburys, giving the music a very full sound without going overboard, and never losing sight of the singer at the center of it all. Dion also plays rhythm guitar alongside Edmunds (on lead) and Bryan Adams (who also sings, along with Lou Reed, Patty Smyth, and Paul Simon) on these sides, but mostly the focus is on his voice and on lyrics about romance, the streets of the Bronx, and generally a past worth reveling in.
Track List
(try tracks 2,3 and 6)
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