Given the track record of actors-turned-singers, it's easy to be suspicious that
Danny Aiello's 2004 album
I Just Wanted to Hear the Words is nothing but a vanity project, which he himself admits in the liner notes. But in those very liner notes he argues against that idea, claiming that he's been singing for years, long before he became an actor, and he just never had the "guts" to make a go of it professionally until now. Instead, he sang at family parties and weddings, or afterhours at the nightclub where he worked as a bouncer, which gives a pretty good indication of what
I Just Wanted to Hear the Words is. It's a mellow, likeable, and not particularly remarkable set of standards sung in the style of
Sinatra, and it gets by on personality as much as skill. Which isn't to say that
Aiello doesn't have skill, since he does, but his choice of material, his arrangements, and his phrasing are so safe, so familiar that the only thing that distinguishes the album is
Aiello's personality, how he inhabits the songs. And that's where it gets tricky, because if you listened to the album without knowing it was
Aiello the actor, you'd likely think that it's the work of an ingratiating wedding singer. When you know it's
Aiello the actor, you tend to view it a little more kindly, impressed that it's not embarrassing like some other records by actors, yet mostly cutting it slack because you already like the guy. Even so,
I Just Wanted to Hear the Words is unlikely to gather too many repeat plays since it's so similar to other albums by better singers -- namely,
Sinatra -- that there's little reason to put it on at home. But it does suggest that it would be fun to see
Aiello sing in a club sometime. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine