The
singer
spends
more
time
at
home
these
days
but
still
flies
out
for
shows.
By
JOHN
BENSON
-
VINDICATOR
CORRESPONDENT
Entering
his
fourth
decade
as a
pop
star,
Barry
"I
write
the
songs
that
make
the
whole
world
sing"
Manilow
brings
his
"Manilow:
An
Evening
of
Music
and
Passion"
to
Northeast
Ohio
for
a
Friday
show
at
Quicken
Loans
Arena.
With
record
sales
exceeding
75
million,
including
his
most
recent
three
albums
—
"The
Greatest
Songs
of
the
Fifties,"
"The
Greatest
Songs
of
the
Sixties"
and
"The
Greatest
Songs
of
the
Seventies"
—
Manilow
continues
to
be
one
of
the
most
popular
recording
artists
of
his
era.
His
list
of
radio
hits
include
"Mandy,"
"I
Write
The
Songs."
"Looks
Like
We
Made
It,"
"Can't
Smile
Without
You"
and
more.
The
Vindicator
caught
up
with
Manilow
recently
in a
phone
call
to
his
Palm
Springs
home.
Q.
When
we
talked
in
2004
for
your
farewell
tour,
you
said,
"I'm
done
touring
with
semis
and
being
away
from
home
for
three
or
four
months
at a
time."
However,
we
notice
the
press
release
for
your
upcoming
show
mentions
"Manilow:
An
Evening
of
Music
and
Passion"
being
an
11-truck
extravaganza.
A.
They're
touring
but
I'm
not
(laughs).
I'm
home
and
even
when
we
do
these
gigs,
I
just
fly
right
home.
What
I
needed
to
stop
doing
was
being
away
from
home
for
three
weeks
at a
time
and
in
hotel
rooms
night
after
night,
not
having
any
personal
life.
I
certainly
don't
want
to
stop
performing,
I
didn't
want
to
stop
playing
with
my
band
and
being
around
an
audience
and
doing
all
that.
I
just
needed
to
get
off
the
road,
and
I
have."
Q.
On
the
road
or
off,
you're
still
quite
successful
with
your
resident
show
at
the
Las
Vegas
Hilton
and
now
the
trilogy
of
tribute
discs.
What
was
your
expectation
going
into
the
recording
of
the
cover
albums?
A.
I
had
no
expectations.
It
was
all
a
Clive
Davis
brilliant
idea
once
again.
He
is
the
greatest
record
man
in
the
history
of
music,
and
I'm
the
grateful
recipient
of
his
brilliance.
He
came
up
with
this
idea
—
"The
Greatest
Songs
of
the
Fifties"
—
and
just
like
I've
always
done
with
this
guy,
I
said,
"I
don't
agree
with
you.
It's
never
going
to
be a
hit.
How
could
it
be a
hit?
They're
square
and
old-fashioned."
I've
done
it
from
"Mandy"
to
last
year.
But
I
just
followed
and
he
just
led
me
up
the
charts
again.
Q.
So
what
is
it
that
attracts
your
fans
to
square
and
old-fashioned
material?
A.
I
think
the
songs
are
comforting,
not
challenging,
and
make
people
feel
good.
I
think
Clive
is
absolutely
right,
that
people
just
need
to
hear
beautiful
melodies
and
familiar
songs.
Q.
Unlike
say
the
novelty
aspect
of
Rod
Stewart
delving
into
the
Great
American
Songbook
or
Johnny
Cash
transforming
rock
songs
into
singer-songwriter
gems,
your
"Greatest
Songs"
albums
seemingly
eschews
artifice
for
integrity.
You
could
have
easily
covered
The
Bee
Gees
"Stayin'
Alive"
but
instead
chose
a
timeless
classic
such
as
Simon
&
Garfunkel's
"Bridge
Over
Troubled
Water."
A.
Honestly,
this
is a
Clive
Davis
project.
I
was
the
arranger,
producer
and
vocalist
but
this
is
his
idea.
We
came
up
with
a
rule
that
the
songs
had
to
have
been
No.
1
records
in
all
three
decades
or
tremendously
famous.
And
Clive
had
the
idea
of
what
kind
of
songs,
the
tone
of
each
album,
and
the
style
that
he
wanted.
So I
just
followed
his
lead.
I
would
have
done
"Stayin'
Alive"
and
had
a
ball,
but
he
had
this
idea
to
make
these
albums
into
adult
contemporary
stuff
that
people
can
play
all
day
long.
Q.
Considering
you've
released
over
25
studio
albums
in
your
nearly
35-year
career,
are
you
performing
any
hidden
gems
or
obscure
album
tracks
in
your
current
set?
A.
We're
playing
arenas
and
my
hidden
gems
go
over
like
a
lead
balloon
(laughs).
These
audiences
really
want
to
hear
the
hits.
They
really
love
them,
and
they
put
up
with
my
artistic
songs
until
I
hit
"Weekend
in
New
England,"
and
then
they
go
through
the
roof.
I
see
what
they
want.
I
haven't
been
on
the
road
for
a
long
time,
haven't
seen
them
in a
long
time,
and
they
really
want
to
hear
the
hits.
It
brings
back
memories.
And
if I
do
one
of
my
hidden
little
gems,
then
that
performance
is
for
me.
So
I'm
not
there
for
me.
I'm
there
for
them."