Extensions (The Manhattan Transfer album)

Extensions
Studio album by The Manhattan Transfer
Released October 31, 1979
Genre Jazz
Label Atlantic
Producer Jay Graydon
The Manhattan Transfer chronology
The Manhattan Transfer Live
(1978)
Extensions
(1979)
Mecca for Moderns
(1981)

Extensions is the fourth album by The Manhattan Transfer, released on October 31, 1979, on the Atlantic Records label.

Marking a new era for the group, the album was the first one with Cheryl Bentyne, who replaced Laurel Massé the previous year. It was also the first album that contained songs that were hits in both the jazz and pop categories. The disco hit song "Twilight Zone/Twilight Tone" reached #12 on Billboard's Disco chart, and on the Hot 100 reached #30. "Trickle, Trickle" reached #73 on the Billboard Magazine's Hot 100 chart. Overall, the album reached #55 on the Billboard Magazine Top LP's chart.

The most widely known song from this album, Joe Zawinul's "Birdland," won the group its first Grammy Award for Best Jazz Fusion Performance, Vocal or Instrumental in 1981.[1] Jon Hendricks wrote lyrics for the vocalese version on the album and Janis Siegel received a Grammy for her vocal arrangement of "Birdland". Eddie Jefferson was writing the new lyrics for the song "Birdland", but he was killed before finishing them. This album is dedicated to him. "Birdland" was the most played Jazz track in 1980 and many regard "Birdland" as the "signature song" of the group.

Charts

Extensions debuted on Billboard's Top Pop Album chart on December 8, 1979.

Track listing

# Song title Composer/songwriter Length
1 Birdland Jon Hendricks, Joe Zawinul 6:00
2 Wacky Dust Stanley Adams, Oscar Levant 3:10
3 Nothin' You Can Do About It David Foster, Jay Graydon, Steve Kipner 4:25
4 Coo Coo-U Bill Loughborough, David "Buck" Wheat 2:13
5 Body and Soul Frank Eyton, Johnny Green, Edward Heyman, Robert Sour 4:26
6 Twilight Zone/Twilight Tone Jay Graydon, Bernard Herrmann, Alan Paul 6:05
7 Trickle Trickle Clarence Bassett 2:19
8 Shaker Song Jay Beckenstein, David Lasley, Allee Willis 4:30
9 Foreign Affair Tom Waits 3:54

References / Sources

  1. LA Times Grammy winners database Accessed 2008 April 14.
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