Judging by the popularity of
the Sandpipers' debut long-player,
Guantanamera (1966), the mid-'60s were primed for an easier contrast to the increasingly raucous strains of rock & roll. The idea of overhauling modern material -- from a variety of sources and genres -- into soft and affective ballads and in English and Spanish was (and remains) a novel concept. Behind the scenes, staff producer
Tommy LiPuma and musical arrangers
Nick DeCaro and
Mort Garson were molding vocalists
Jim Brady, Mike Piano, and Richard Shoff -- and the often uncredited Pamela Ramcier. They wanted to create a product structurally similar to what
Herb Alpert -- co-owner of
the Sandpipers' A&M Records label -- had done with his Tijuana Brass. The plan worked as the LP went all the way to a very respectable number 13 on the Pop Album chart. The title track -- from
Pete Seeger's adaptation of a poem by Cuban writer Jose Marti -- fared even better, landing in the Top Ten Singles survey. It was followed into the countdown by a rich and dreamy Latin-flavored reading of the "garage" classic "Louie Louie" -- in Spanish, no less. That bilingual performance style permeates several melodies that would have been familiar to the intended audience. Among them are "Strangers in the Night" -- which is also given a hauntingly beautiful and contemporary introduction -- as well as the traditional Mexican folk tune "La Bamba." The Sandpipers even take on the British Invasion with a mellow and otherwise outstanding arrangement of
the Beatles' "Things We Said Today." Equally worthy of repeated spins is the light optimism in the update of
Vince Guaraldi's "Cast Your Fate to the Wind" and the closer, "Angelica." The former evokes the sanguine quirkiness of the mid-'60s
Harpers Bizarre quintet, while the latter embodies the opposite end of the emotive spectrum as the
Barry Mann and
Cynthia Weil selection is a noir ballad that offers darker sonic shading than the more popular versions by
Scott Walker,
Gene Pitney, or
the Sandpipers' easy listening rival
Percy Faith. In 2000, Collectors' Choice Music paired
Guantanamera with the combo's eponymous
The Sandpipers (1967) onto a single CD -- making both available for the first time in decades. ~ Lindsay Planer