A darkly beautiful collection of ballads,
Moondreams has been prized by collectors of vocal jazz and standards for decades. Like
Frank Sinatra,
Dick Haymes was a great romantic balladeer with a sunny image in the 1940s, who found his career in steep decline when that image turned out to hide a darker side. Like
Sinatra,
Haymes became an even greater vocalist in the 1950s, but they didn't share the same second round of success.
Moondreams is the second of two superb albums that
Haymes cut for Capitol Records in the mid-'50s and it's the single finest work in his vast catalog. A collection of dark torch songs and gently swinging ballads, the album features
Haymes' beautiful, relaxed, but deeply nuanced vocals and richly atmospheric small-group jazz, with string arrangements by
Johnny Mandel and Ian Bernard, both of whom were associated with the West Coast cool jazz scene of the time.
Moondreams is equal to the best LPs that
Sinatra,
Nat King Cole,
June Christy, and
Peggy Lee were cutting for Capitol Records at the same time, and the album deserves to be discovered by a new generation. ~ Nick Dedina