The king of easy listening is back. It's been 29 years since Barry Manilow last had a No 1 album, but this week he has pulled off the old magic one more time.
Manilow's new compilation of golden oldies - what else? - unexpectedly soared to the top spot in the US Billboard chart in its first week of release, to the delight of his middle-of-the-road, predominantly female audience and, no doubt, the horror of just about everyone else.
The album title says it all: The Greatest Songs of the Fifties. The tracks - Are You Lonesome Tonight?, Beyond the Sea, Unchained Melody - are tried, true and indestructibly safe.
But no matter: Manilow's eyes are still blue. His hair and face, even at the age of 62, have a Cliff Richard air of eternal youth. And he still holds that microphone up to his mouth like a man whispering his most intimate secrets to a cherished lounge cushion.
Back in the 1970s, when Manilow made the best of his gawky features and memorably protuberant nose to pioneer the blow-dried, whitened teeth, fake suntan style of crooning, he was the man you either loved or hated, but certainly couldn't get away from.
His hits, from Mandy to Copacabana to I Wanna Do It With You, were on the radio, in the office lift and even in the dentist's waiting room. He was Rod Stewart without the rocker edge or the raspy voice, Tom Jones without the demonic sexual undercurrent, a sort of male Barbra Streisand.
He was roasted by the critics and lampooned by comedians, but still his albums sold by the million. The past 20 years or so have been considerably quieter, as he has popped in and out of Las Vegas, packaged and repackaged his old songs and helped oversee Copacabana: The Musical.
But he never entirely went away, as boy bands from Take That to Westlife hit paydirt by covering his old hits.
That this music should be thriving when it bears absolutely no relation to what young people are listening to these days may not be a coincidence. The past year has seen an explosion in sales via musical downloads, while album-length CDs have dived - a 7 per cent drop in business between 2004 and 2005, and a 21 per cent drop since 2000.
Manilow's album took the top spot selling only 156,000 units across the entire US. Compare that with the Arctic Monkeys, who sold 360,000 copies of their debut album in Britain last week, and you have to wonder if Manilow's comeback is as big as it looks, or if his fanbase is just too old for the iPod and MP3 craze.
At this week's Grammys in Los Angeles, Manilow was celebrating with manager Clive Davis. His outfit: a burgundy crushed velvet jacket, black shirt and black tie. Hey, it's the 1970s all over again.
- INDEPENDENT
Golden oldies get Manilow back in charts
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