Kenny Rankin: In The Name Of Love (Columbia)

rankin_45.jpg

This 45 Columbia version differs significantly from the Scat vocal / acoustic guitar led LP cut. One of my favorite Jazz 45′s that recently got crossed off the wants list.

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Filed under: 45's and 7's, Jazz

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7 comments for Kenny Rankin: In The Name Of Love (Columbia)

  1. Stefan J. Nova says:

    thanks for posting this one.. this is one of my all-time favourite jazzy singer/songwriter tunes.

    “in the name of love” has been written by kenny rankin & estelle levitt ( “all i dream”) and was covered by peggy lee (1964), harry belafonte, joan tolliver, j.j. johnson and others during the sixties. i assume it must have been his biggest success in songwriting before the release of his 1967 debut-album “mind dusters” (mercury) , which contained the single “peaceful” – as covered by helen reddy in 1973.
    this, lets say, original version was arranged and produced by robert mersey and must have been “released” around 1966, but could have been recorded 1 or 2 years before.
    like of all other 7″s kenny rankin (and his wife yvonne) released on columbia in the mid 60s only promo-copy’s seem to exist.
    after releasing a string of teen pop 7″s on decca in the late 50s /early 60s also sung in italian, french and german for the european market he turned more towards a jazzy singer/songwriter style during his short columbia period. around that time he also appeared several times on johnny carson’s “the tonight show”. in 1965 he was a session-guitarist for the recordings of bob dylan’s “bringing it all back home”. hence his cover-version of “tambourine man” on his debut album in 1967?

  2. janie says:

    I found this information very interesting as I have been trying to find records of Joan Tollivers for a friend of mine and how difficult they seem to be to find. Thanks for the history lesson.

  3. Stefan J. Nova says:

    yes arnold.. you’re right. i recently saw the red issue the first time.
    the strange thing is.. i have like 5-6 different columbia 7″s by kenny (and yvonne) rankin and all were white promos.. so i was beginning to think that his mid sixties songs were only released as radio-promos on columbia.