Singer/Songwriter Andy Williams performs
during the 40th Annual Songwriters Hall of Fame ceremony on June 18,
2009, in New York.
Andy Williams, known as one of the "easy listening"
artists, recorded more than 40 solo studio albums, and more than a
dozen of these went platinum or gold.
Williams, who died Sept,
26, 20012, after a battle with cancer, released his first album, "Andy
Williams Sings Steve Allen," in 1956, followed by "Andy Williams Sings
Rodgers and Hammerstein" two years later.
In
the late 1950s and throughout the 1960s, Williams released dozens of
albums, sometimes as many as three a year. Among his hit albums from
this period were "Moon River," " Days of Wine and Roses, which was
number one on the charts for 16 weeks, "The Andy Williams Christmas
Album," "Dear Heart," "The Shadow of Your Smile," "Love, Andy," "Get
Together with Andy Williams," and "Love Story."
Movie songs, epitomized by his his most famous song "Moon River,"
became something of a specialty for him. According to the AP, the Johnny
Mercer-Henry Mancini ballad that made him famous was never released as a
single because his record company feared such lines as "my huckleberry
friend'' were too confusing and old-fashioned for the teens who were
buying most of the new music at the time.
His last studio album, "I Don't Remember Ever Growing Up," came out in 2007.
Williams
also was involved in dozens of compilations and recorded two live
albums in the 1990s, after he had opened his theater in Branson, Mo.
According
to the singer's website, a Fiat commercial in England in the 1990s that
featured his 1967 song "Music to Watch Girls" became so popular that
the record company re-released the song as a single. It was a Top 10
hit, doing much better than the original release.
Williams was nominated for five Grammy awards and hosted the Grammy ceremonies for several years.