Through
Tony Bennett's long, remarkable career, it's possible to trace the evolution and endurance of vocal pop and jazz in the 20th century. Unlike his idol
Frank Sinatra,
Bennett was too young to be part of the first wave of the Great American Songbook in the years before World War II. He achieved his national breakthrough in 1951, when the charts were dominated by soft-focused orchestral pop and novelties, music that
Bennett himself would often sing during his early years. Occasionally, he was given the opportunity to sing jazz while recording for
Columbia in the '50s, but it was a pop song that turned him into a superstar in 1962: "I Left My Heart in San Francisco," a song styled after the classic pop of the pre-war era. "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" turned into an enduring standard of the 20th century but, for a while, its popularity eclipsed that of the singer who popularized the tune.
Bennett didn't weather the '60s well, thanks to record companies who attempted to modernize his sound, and while he had an artistically fruitfully '70s on his short-lived independent label Improv, he recorded albums with pianist
Bill Evans that established his jazz bona fides -- he suffered a series of personal problems that left him at rock bottom at the dawn of the '80s. It was then he achieved one of the greatest comebacks in pop music history. Hiring his son
Danny as his manager, he reunited with his music director/pianist
Ralph Sharon and began targeting younger audiences without shedding his longtime fans. This strategy paid off in the '90s, when 1992's
Perfectly Frank topped Billboard's jazz charts and went Gold.
Bennett's crossover to the pop mainstream seemed to culminate with 1994's
MTV Unplugged, an unexpected hit that took home the Grammy for Album of the Year, but it turned out his revival was no flash in the pan.
Bennett stayed in the spotlight until the '90s, not only maintaining his audience but building it through a series of duets with stars as diverse as
Lady Gaga and
Diana Krall. His partners may have changed along with the times, but through it all,
Bennett remained a skilled, charismatic practitioner -- and vocal advocate -- for classic American pop.
The son of a grocer,
Tony Bennett was born Anthony Dominick Benedetto on August 3, 1926. Raised in Astoria, Queens by Italian emigrates -- his father John was a recent arrival from Reggio Calabria, his mother Anna was born to natives of the Calabria region who headed to the States in 1899 --
Bennett suffered from poverty and ill fortune as a child, yet he also cultivated an interest in art and music. By the time his father died when
Tony was ten, he was already singing professionally, notably performing alongside Mayor Fiorello La Guardia at the opening of the Triborough Bridge in 1936. As a teenager,
Bennett had several gigs as a singing waiter and he enrolled in New York's School of Industrial Art, studying music and painting. When times got tight in his family, he dropped out of school to support his mother and siblings, making money once again as a singing waiter.
Bennett was drafted into the Army in 1944, during the final year of World War II. Stationed in Europe, he saw combat in France and Germany; he was also part of the liberation of a Nazi concentration camp outside of Landsberg. Staying in Germany as part of the occupying force, he sang in a Special Services band before his discharge in 1946. Upon returning home, he attended the American Theatre Wing under the G.I. Bill, all the while working as a singing waiter.
During 1949,
Bennett's career began to take off. While working under the stage name Joe Bari, he recorded a version of
George & Ira Gershwin's "Fascinating Rhythm" for Leslie, a single that didn't go anywhere but did coincide with the singer catching the attention of
Pearl Bailey. She hired him to open for her at a Greenwich Village concert, which was attended by comedian
Bob Hope. Taken by the singer then known as Joe Bari,
Hope invited the vocalist on tour on the provision he change his name. Deeming Anthony Bendedetto too long for a marquee,
Hope shortened the singer's name to
Tony Bennett.
Things began to happen quickly for
Bennett after this point. In 1950, he recorded a demo of "The Boulevard of Broken Dreams," on the basis of which
Mitch Miller signed him to
Columbia Records. The label was steeling itself for the departure of
Frank Sinatra, who feuded often with
Miller.
Bennett eased into his vacancy by singing chart-friendly pop tunes, starting with "Because of You," which was buttressed by an arrangement by
Percy Faith. It reached number one in September 1951, followed quickly by a cover of
Hank Williams' "Cold, Cold Heart." This single also reached number one, its success often cited as elevating
Hank Williams' reputation outside of the South and country music circles. "Cold Cold Heart" also proved
Bennett wasn't a one-hit wonder, either. During 1952, he racked up three hit singles, the biggest of which was "Here in My Heart," which peaked at 15, and he reached the top of the charts again in 1953 with "Rags to Riches," which was followed quickly by the number two single "Stranger in Paradise," a song taken from the Broadway musical Kismet.
Bennett charted regularly over the next two years, with a handful of songs breaking into the Top 10 -- "There'll Be No Teardrops Tonight" and "Cinnamon Sinner," both from 1954 -- before the pop charts were changed irrevocably in 1956 by the rise of rock & roll.
While
Bennett didn't disappear from the single charts in the second half of the '50s -- "Can You Find It in Your Heart?" went to 16 in 1956, the same year that "From the Candy Store on the Corner to the Chapel on the Hill" peaked at 11; he cracked the Top Ten in 1957 with "In the Middle of the Island" -- but shifted his attention to adult-oriented formats, such as albums and nightclubs, which allowed him to indulge in his love of jazz. On 1957's
The Beat of My Heart, he collaborated with arranger
Ralph Sharon -- a pianist who would become
Bennett's accompanist and musical director -- on an album that featured saxophonist
Nat Adderley and emphasized percussionists
Chico Hamilton,
Art Blakey,
Sabu, and
Jo Jones. In 1959, he released
In Person!, a live album where he was backed by the Count Basie Orchestra;
Bennett returned the favor by recording Strike Up the Band with Basie's Orchestra. As the '50s gave way to the '60s,
Bennett increasingly specialized in swinging and soft versions of the Great American Songbook, mining territory pioneered by
Frank Sinatra.
Sharon brought "I Left My Heart in San Francisco," a song written by recent New York city transplants George Cory and Douglass Cross, to
Bennett in late 1961.
Tennessee Ernie Ford previously passed on the song but
Bennett recorded it in early 1962, with
Columbia placing it on the B-side of "Once Upon a Time." DJs preferred "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" to its flip and the ballad started its steady climb up the charts, peaking at number 19 but staying on the charts for the lion's share of 1962. An album named after the hit was rushed onto the market, reaching number five on Billboard's Top 200, and the song garnered Grammy awards for Record of the Year and Best Solo Vocal Performance, Male. The success of "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" wasn't limited to 1962: it turned into an enduring standard, earning an induction into the Grammy Hall of Fame and selected for preservation in the National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress.
"I Left My Heart in San Francisco" may have turned
Bennett into a superstar but he didn't remain at the top of the charts for much longer. Immediately after its success, he had Top 20 hits in 1963 with "I Wanna Be Around" and "The Good Life," but the following year saw the British Invasion sweeping America, dramatically decreasing the space for adult-oriented pop in the Top 40.
Bennett continued to record easy listening material through the '60s, sometimes scraping the bottom of the Top 40, usually placing high on Billboard's Easy Listening charts between 1964 and 1966. "Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)" reached three on Easy Listening in 1964, with "If I Ruled the World" and "The Shadow of the Smile" making it to eight on the same chart the following year, and "A Time for Love" reached three in 1966.
In 1967,
Bennett dipped his toe into contemporary pop with a cover of
Stevie Wonder's "For Once in My Life." This shift was instigated by the new president of
Columbia,
Clive Davis, who was intent on modernizing his easy listening singers.
Bennett reluctantly agreed to pursue this path, releasing covers of
Jimmy Webb's "MacArthur Park" and
George Harrison's "Something" in 1969 and 1970. Both singles were modest easy listening hits and were featured on the 1970 LP
Tony Sings the Great Hits of Today!, an album
Bennett would later claim made him physically ill to record. Neither the album nor its swift sequel
Tony Bennett's Something (which once again featured
the Beatles song on record) revitalized the singer's commercial fortunes, so
Columbia rode out his contract over the next year, parting ways with
Bennett after 1972's With Love.
Bennett's departure from
Columbia kick-started a turbulent decade for the singer, one where he bounced between labels as he struggled with a variety of personal problems.
Verve signed him in 1972, releasing The Good Things in Life that fall, but the association was short-lived: one more album, Listen Easy, followed in 1973 before they parted ways. During his brief stint with the label,
Bennett also hosted a British television show called Tony Bennett at the Talk of the Town. He next moved to Los Angeles, where he founded his own label, Improv, with the assistance of Bill Hassett in 1975. Improv was hobbled with distribution problems that would lead to its early dissolution in 1977, but the five albums
Bennett recorded for the imprint were instrumental in raising his reputation as a jazz singer, particularly the pair of albums he cut with pianist
Bill Evans: 1975's
The Tony Bennett/Bill Evans Album -- which reached 31 on Billboard's Jazz albums chart -- and its 1976 sequel
Together Again. Left without a label,
Bennett wound up performing regularly in Las Vegas, suffering through drug addiction, financial problems, and the dissolution of his second marriage.
Bennett turned his career around by hiring his son
Danny as his manager.
Danny Bennett moved his father back to New York City and off the Vegas circuit, lining up a series of shows in intimate venues instead. The singer also reunited with pianist
Ralph Sharon, who'd served as his musical director in the early '60s.
Bennett worked steadily as a live performer but made his comeback as a recording artist in 1986 when he released
The Art of Excellence, his first album for
Columbia in 14 years.
The Art of Excellence began a renaissance period for
Tony Bennett, one that proved to last for decades. While his son cannily booked his father on television shows appealing to younger demographics,
Bennett maintained his allegiance to pre-war vocal pop and jazz, becoming the torch bearer for the Great American Songbook.
Astoria: Portrait of the Artist, a 1990 album where
Bennett gazed back at his past, consolidated the artistic gains of
The Art of Excellence, and the 1991 box set
Forty Years: The Artistry of Tony Bennett made a case for his enduring legacy but it was his 1992
Sinatra tribute
Perfectly Frank that was the catalyst for his remarkable crossover success in the '90s.
Perfectly Frank topped the Billboard Jazz chart -- it made it to 102 on the Top 200, his best placement since 1971 -- on its way to winning the Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance, a category
Bennett would dominate over the next decade; it also became his first album to be certified Gold since 1967's Tony's Greatest Hits, Vol. 3.
Steppin' Out, its 1993 sequel, saluted
Fred Astaire, and along with replicating its predecessor's success -- it took home the Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance Grammy, topped the Jazz albums chart, and went Gold -- it also received some play on MTV for its title track. This opened the door for
Bennett's appearance on
MTV Unplugged in 1994, a performance that was released as an album in April 1994. Featuring guest appearances by
k.d. lang and
Elvis Costello,
MTV Unplugged turned into smash hit, reaching 48 on Billboard's Top 200 (it also topped their Jazz chart), achieving Platinum certification and winning the Grammy not just for Best Traditional Pop Vocal, but Album of the Year.
After
MTV Unplugged,
Bennett rode a hot streak that lasted well into the 21st century. He remained a popular concert attraction and recorded regularly, often alternating thematic tribute records with duet albums.
Here's to the Ladies, the 1995 set which was his first studio album since
Steppin' Out, found him singing songs usually associated with female vocalists, while 1997's
On Holiday was a salute to
Billie Holiday; both took home Grammys for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance, as did 1999's
Bennett Sings Ellington: Hot & Cool. Peaking at 50 on the Top 200 and going Gold, Playin' with My Friends: Bennett Sings the Blues, a 2001 collection, was his biggest hit since
MTV Unplugged, but it was eclipsed by 2002's duet album with
k.d. lang,
A Wonderful World, which reached 41 and went Gold; both records won the Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album, as did 2004's
The Art of Romance.
Bennett celebrated his 80th birthday in 2006 with the release of
Duets: An American Classic. Featuring guest appearances by a host of pop stars including
Elton John,
Paul McCartney, and
George Michael, the album rivaled
MTV Unplugged in popularity, peaking at three on the Billboard Top 200 and earning a Platinum certification. Its 2011 sequel, Duets II, bested its predecessor by entering the charts at number one; both albums took home the Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album.
Viva Duets, a collection of duets with Latino singers, peaked at five in 2012.
Tony Bennett's next big hit was Cheek to Cheek, a collection of jazz standards recorded with
Lady Gaga. Released in September 2014, Cheek to Cheek debuted at number one on the Billboard Top 200 and wound up winning the Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album Grammy. In 2015,
Bennett teamed up with pianist
Bill Charlap for
The Silver Lining: The Songs of Jerome Kern, a jazz-oriented effort that was another Traditional Pop Vocal Album Grammy winner.
Bennett marked his 90th birthday in 2016 with an all-star concert held at Radio City Music Hall. Featuring
k.d. lang,
Lady Gaga,
Michael Bublé, and
Andrea Bocelli, the concert was released as the live album
Tony Bennett Celebrates 90. In September of 2018,
Bennett released
Love Is Here to Stay, a duet album with
Diana Krall that doubled as a tribute to
George Gershwin.
Early in 2021,
Bennett revealed to AARP Magazine that he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2016. His doctors believed his active schedule of performing and recording kept his brain stimulated during the initial years after his diagnosis, but once he was forced off the road due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, he and his son
Danny decided the time was right for the singer to retire. Early in August, 2021, Bennett gave a pair of Radio City Music Hall concerts, after which his team announced they'd be his last shows. In October,
Bennett released
Love for Sale, his second duet album with
Lady Gaga. The pair recorded the album between 2018 and 2020, focusing on
Cole Porter songs. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine