Description
Streetheart is an album by the American singer and songwriter Dion DiMucci of Dion & the Belmonts fame, released on Warner Records in 1976. The basic rhythm tracks were recorded at Sound Labs in Hollywood; California; with Michael Omartian and Steve Barri producing.
After the abortive experimentation of Born to Be With You, Dion seemed to retreat to relative commercial safety on Streetheart. But safe doesn’t mean bland, and from the opening number – an unexpectedly convincing cover of «The Way You Do the Things You Do» that’s just about worth the price of the album – we get the artist pushing in different directions, embracing lots of different sounds, not all of them wholly successful, but the confessional «Runaway Man», the anti-nostalgia anthem «Queen of ’59» (with Phil Everly on harmony vocals), and «If I Can Just Get Through Tonight» are as personal as anything Dion ever recorded, while «More to You (Than Meets the Eye)» and «You Showed Me What Love Is» are breezy contemporary pop numbers, the latter with a pretty cool soul chorus. It’s not the best work that Dion has done, but it was an important re-grouping for the singer after his experience with Phil Spector on the previous album – Streetheart proved he still knew how to straddle his present and his past comfortably and effectively. [Bruce Eder, AMG]
Born To Be With You / Streetheart, Ace Records, CD re-issue
I bought a second hand copy of ‘Born To Be With You‘ on vinyl in the early ’80s in Tape and Record Exchange. It cost £1. I’d fallen in love with Dion’s ‘Inside Job’ gospel album having once loved the Bronx maestro’s doowop/rock’n’roll. So, I reasoned, this stone flop from 1975 has to be some good. For one thing it was produced by Phil Spector whose famed Wall of Sound had been an accompaniment to my teenage years back in the ’60s. For another thing, there were enough hints on the sleeve, like a version of the gospel warhorse «He’s Got The Whole World In His Hands», to think this was a post-conversion project. But more importantly, ‘Born To Be With You’ was, to my ears, one of the most stunning albums I had ever heard. Now 20 years on seemingly the whole world agrees. That £1 purchase has become a collector’s item and people are lining up to say how cloth-eared the public was for not recognising it as a classic back in 1975. “Awesome,” commented a Daily Telegraph critic; “Absolutely beautiful,” raved Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie while Sean Rowley on Channel 4 claimed that, “This record will change your life.” This timely reissue comes from Ace (the brilliant mainstream record company who also brought you Dion’s essential gospel compilation ‘Deja Nu’). So what do you get here? Well, for a start you get one of the GREAT voices of pop, a majestic instrument that can tackle wistful folk or downtown doowop, sassy blues or soaring ballads and bring his own “live the song” identity to everything he tackles. Secondly, you get a quintessential production from the mad genius of the studio were 10 guitar players, two xylophones, three bass players, an eight piece horn section, choir, string section and four percussionists show that noisy pop didn’t begin with heavy metal. Thirdly, you get some artfully chosen songs taking in Mann and Weils’ prayer to «Make The Woman Love Me», the haunting «Only You Know» (penned by Gerry Goffin and Phil Spector), the gutbucket «Good Lovin’ Man» (complete with Elmore James-style guitar licks) and the tour-de-force title track where a 1958 Chordettes hit is transformed into an unforgettable declaration of tremulous adoration. Apparently Dion’s stunning vocal with its riveting “born-born-born-born-born to be with you” hook was a first take improvisation to fill up the gaps of the dirge-tempo track while the sax breaks are sublime. Then, as a piece de resistance there’s «He’s Got The Whole World In His Hands» which, in the words of Mojo magazine, “Sounds like a team of 100 people celebrating life, love and faith.” If ‘Born To Be With You’ wasn’t enough, this reissue also gives you a bonus track, «Baby Let’s Stick Together», great sleeve notes and, on the same CD, a revisit to the 1976 ‘Streetheart’ (coproduced incidentally by Michael Omartian) does a nifty version of the Temps’ soul classic «The Way You Do The Things You Do», while Dion’s chilling rendition of «If I Can Just Get Through The Night» recalls his battle against the demons of drug addiction before his Christian deliverance in 1968. Utterly recommended. [Tony Cummings, Cross Rhythms, July 2001]
> Apple Music (https://music.apple.com/us/album/born-to-be-with-you-streetheart/1706181158)
LP tracklist:
Side One
A1. “The Way You Do The Things You Do” – 3:50
A2. “Runaway Man” – 3:04
A3. “Queen Of ’59” – 3:28
A4. “If I Can Just Get Through Tonight” – 3:28
A5. “More To You (Than Meets The Eye)” – 2:57
A6. “You Showed Me What Love Is” – 3:09
Side Two
B1. “Hey Me Love” – 3:20
B2. “Oh The Night” – 4:34
B3. “I’ll Give You All I Got” – 3:23
B4. “Lover Boy Supreme” – 3:31
B5. “Streetheart” – 5:23
Note: Simultaneously released on 8-track tape, cassette, and 12-inch vinyl LP by Warner Records. Later re-issued on CD.




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