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The new DVD set, This Is Tom Jones: Legendary Performers, is about to be released and we were fortunate enough to have an advance look. It is terrific; in many ways better than the first set released last June and, in other ways, not as good.
Five of the six shows excerpted here are from Season 2 of TITJ. The episode with Jerry Lee Lewis (we’ll get back to that in a moment) is the eighth show of the first season. The set begins with Tom and Sammy Davis, Jr., in the Season 2 finale.
Disc 1: If you’ve never seen Sammy Davis, Jr., you’re in for quite a surprise and, if you remember him as the great entertainer he was, you won’t be disappointed. When he and Tom did Sammy’s great hit Mr. Bojangles, it brought us to tears. Literally. And in the segment that recaps some of the season’s guests they work so well together it is a joy to watch — best thing on the two DVD sets.
The second show on Disc 1 features Tony Bennett and Vicki Carr. Bennett is smooth as silk (he’s another who’s just keeps getting better) and this is the show where Tom, dressed in a Star Trek costume, sings Fly Me To the Moon. It’s all great fun.
Disc 2: We found this to be the weakest of the three discs. With Tom on the first show is Bob — not “Bobby” — Darin (who, we must note, looks eerily like Kevin Spacey) doing some country stuff. Blood, Sweat & Tears is great, but Diahann Carroll seems dazed and uncomfortable. Tom, however, as this set makes clear, is more and more comfortable in front of the camera. He’s having a ball and so does the viewer. His concert number on this show is a killer rendition of I Can’t Stop Loving You. Super.
The second show on Disc 2 features one song by Liza Minnelli — sadly, no duet with Tom — and an appearance by comic Pat Cooper, who opened for Tom on tour for quite awhile. It’s all kind of dated, but Tom’s concert on this show closes with Long Tall Sally and — wow! — we are reminded how this guy could move.
Disc 3: This one begins with Tom singing Funny How Time Slips Away, accompanied by piano and guitar. The pianist is Jerry Lee Lewis and the guitarist is the legendary Chet Atkins. They aren’t introduced before the song, but from the smile that plays across Tom’s face when the first notes of the song are heard, you just know — in that quiet moment (pictured here at the left) — that Tom is thrilled to share the stage with Jerry Lee. Must have been a dream come true for him.
Jerry Lee and Tom get to rip it up in a medley of Great Balls of Fire, Down the Line, Long Tall Sally and Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On. In the latter you get to see a bit of the legendary Jerry Lee being the legendary Jerry Lee — kicking the piano bench out of the way and letting loose. (And, trust us, this is mild for him.) It’s just a blast to watch, especially to see Tom having so much fun with his idol. We sense TJ isn’t joking when he talks to Jerry Lee about being a member of his fan club.
The last show features another aptly named “legendary performance.” This time it’s Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash. In the first show on Disc 1, Tom does his impression of Cash singing A Boy Named Sue. That’s fun and the original is here. But why, when the scene is in front of a prison, did he do Folsom Prison Blues? But that is minor carping on our part. Cash does A Boy Named Sue here and it’s fine. He and Tom also do a terrific “coal miner” medley of Working in the Coal Mine, Dark As A Dungeon and the classic Sixteen Tons. It is a memorable show.
Sadly, on this set, there are no interviews with Sir Tom and, on that count, the set is really lacking. On the first set he told some fun anecdotes and the viewer got a sense of the offstage man. The small booklet that serves as liner notes here is, again, not wonderful….But the music! That is uniformly very good and, on some occasions, just great!
You should get it. And, please, let us know how you like it.