When I Need You should have been a monster album for
Albert Hammond. His label at the time, Epic, had just scored with
Engelbert Humperdinck's After the Lovin' while
Leo Sayer hit number one on both Top 40 and AC charts with
Hammond's title track from this disc. Add to all the attention and label savvy the fact that this is an exceptional recording by a songwriter of note, and the fact that it failed to generate any serious renown on its own is a real mystery. There are four co-writes with
Hal David, four co-writes with
Carole Bayer Sager, a songwriting team up with Molly Ann Leiken on "Tangled Up in Tears" (no doubt inspired by
Bob Dylan's 1975 recording for sister label Columbia, "Tangled Up in Blue"), and an extraordinary Charles Calello production of the
Brenda Lee 1962 Top 5 hit "All Alone Am I." The timing for this song to come back couldn't have been better, and
Albert Hammond, resplendent in his best "Adult Contemporary look" album cover which
Mac Davis,
Kenny Rogers, and
Tom Jones could envy, recorded each track on this with a seriousness missing from earlier long players of his. To show just how serious, three titles from his 1976 album,
99 Miles from L.A. appear in updated versions on
When I Need You. All three titles were co-written with
Hal David, a sublime rendition of what would become a hit in 1984 for
Willie Nelson and
Julio Iglesias, "To All the Girls I've Loved Before," "Rivers Are for Boats," and an extremely commercial reading of "99 Miles from L.A.." Both "99 Miles..." and "All Alone Am I" should have obliterated the competition on AC and Top 40 in the mid-'70s. Perhaps programmers never forgave
Hammond for the dreadful "I'm a Train" from 1974, and if his previous label, Mums, was forcing that "hit" down their throats, it could have cost
Hammond credibility at radio. "When I Need You" is as good a performance as
Leo Sayer's, but the production on
Sayer's is a few notches above Calello's work on the title track, and there is the difference. If
John Fogerty almost got sued by Fantasy for copying his own song with the "The Old Man Down the Road"/"Green River" controversy,
Hammond's songwriting partner Mike Hazelwood, on "It Never Rains in Southern California," should have been up in arms with what
Carole Bayer Sager and
Hammond did to "Midnight Lady," you can actually sing "It Never Rains In Southern California" over this clone tune! But the interesting thing here is that
Albert Hammond's
When I Need You is almost as exquisite as the
Carole Bayer Sager/
Burt Bacharach album on Boardwalk, Sometimes Late at Night, and when you see the contributions here from
Bacharach's partners --
Hal David and
Sayer, it qualifies
When I Need You as a perfect bookend to that
Carole Bayer Sager classic. Some hip label should combine both because these discs are exemplary easy listening recordings. ~ Joe Viglione