Sandie | ||||
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Studio album by Sandie Shaw | ||||
Released | February 1965 | |||
Recorded | Pye Studios | |||
Genre | Pop | |||
Length | 32:20 | |||
Label | Pye | |||
Producer | Kenny Woodman | |||
Sandie Shaw chronology | ||||
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Sandie is the first album or L.P. by 1960s British singer Sandie Shaw. Released in February 1965 on the Pye label, it was her only original album to enter the UK chart (most of Shaw's success was through her singles) and peaked at Number 3. In the few months prior to the album's release, Shaw had scored two major hits with the Bacharach/David-penned "(There's) Always Something There to Remind Me" and Chris Andrews's "Girl Don't Come".
Andrews, who had been signed to Shaw as her main songwriter, contributed four new songs to her debut album. These tracks were later released on an EP entitled "Talk About Love." The other eight tracks on the Sandie album were reworkings of songs made popular by other artists. Sandie was eventually released on the CD format on the RPM label in the 1990s as a double package with her second album, Me, and this package was later released in digitally remastered format by EMI in September 2005 with bonus French-language versions of two of the Chris Andrews tracks.
The album opens with "Everybody Loves a Lover", a song originally made popular by Doris Day (written by Robert Allen and Richard Adler) that was performed by Shaw the first time she met her mentor and discoverer Adam Faith. Song number two is Chris Andrews' "Gotta See My Baby Every Day" (also recorded by Adam Faith) followed by "Love Letters," written by Victor Young and Edward Heyman and originally made popular by Ketty Lester. Another Andrews track, "Stop Feeling Sorry For Yourself", is song number four (and also a single by Adam Faith) before a version of Irving Berlin's "Always." Side one ends with the third Chris Andrews track on the album, "Don't Be That Way."