| You Smile – The Song Begins | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | May 1974 | |||
| Recorded | 1974 | |||
| Genre | Jazz pop,[1]Easy Listening | |||
| Length | 39:39 | |||
| Label | A&M SP 3620[2] | |||
| Herb Alpert chronology | ||||
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You Smile – The Song Begins is a 1974 studio album byHerb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass, though billed as "Herb Alpert and the T.J.B." It was the group's first regular studio album since 1969'sThe Brass Are Comin', and was arranged byQuincy Jones.[1]
The album spent eleven weeks on theBillboard Top LPs & Tape chart, reaching number 66 for the week ending June 22, 1974.[3] Two singles from the album charted on theBillboard Hot 100: "Fox Hunt", which reached No. 84 in June 1974,[4] and "Last Tango in Paris", the theme song ofthe film by the same name, which had peaked at No. 77 in April of the previous year.[5]
In his review of the album forAllmusic, Richard S. Ginell wrote that after his four-year break from music, Alpert "...returned to the studio creatively refreshed, his trumpet sounding more soulful and thoughtful, his ears attuned more than ever to jazz...But Alpert was definitely still in a pensive mood, and his evocative self-penned title track and choice of tunes like 'Alone Again (Naturally)' and 'Save the Sunlight' reinforce the LP's mellow, '70s contemporary pop atmosphere. Even the upbeat remake of the TJB's 'Up Cherry Street' is filtered through a phase-shifted gauze, a wistful rose-colored vision of the past."[1]
You Smile – The Song Begins was chosen as one ofBillboard magazine's "Top Album Picks" upon its release in May 1974. The magazine commented that "Herb Alpert is finally back with an LP and for his many fans this set will prove the wait has been worthwhile...Nothing is overstated here, as Alpert gets his point across without wasting a single note."[6]