It'll never be known exactly what made Whipped Cream & Other Delights
Herb Alpert's big commercial breakthrough -- the music or the LP jacket's
luscious nude model covered almost entirely with simulated whipped cream.
Probably both. In any case, Alpert's most famous album is built around
a coherent concept; every song has a title with food in it. Within this
concept, Alpert's musical tastes are still refreshingly eclectic; he uses
Brazilian rhythms on "Green Peppers" and "Bittersweet Samba,"
reaches back to the big-band era for the haunting "Tangerine,"
uses Dixieland jazz on "Butterball," and goes to New Orleans
for the Allen Toussaint-penned title track (familiar to viewers of TV's
The Dating Game). He also has developed a unique sense of timing as a
producer, using pauses for humorous effect, managing to score his second
Top Ten hit with a complex, tempo-shifting version of "A Taste of
Honey." No wonder Alpert drew such a large, diverse audience at his
peak; his choices of tunes spanned eras and generations, while his arrangements
were energetic enough for the young and melodic enough for older listeners.
Whipped Cream & Other Delights, number one in the U.S. for eight weeks,
is available on CD, though the cover obviously doesn't make as alluring
an impression as it did on LP.
(by Richard S. Ginell, All
Music Guide)
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