Happiness Is Dean Martin

Happiness Is Dean Martin
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 1967
RecordedMarch 1967
GenreTraditional pop, country
Length29:28
LabelReprise
RS 6242
ProducerJimmy Bowen
Dean Martin chronology
The Dean Martin TV Show
(1966)
Happiness Is Dean Martin
(1967)
Welcome to My World
(1967)

Happiness Is Dean Martin is a 1967 studio album by Dean Martin arranged by Ernie Freeman and Bill Justis.[1]

This was the first of two albums that Martin released in 1967. He had released five albums in 1966, as well as appearing in his television show and starring in three films.[1] Martin's eight previous singles had been Top 40 hits between 1964 and 1966; three tracks from this album, "Nobody's Baby Again", "(Open Up the Door) Let the Good Times In," and "Lay Some Happiness on Me," had previously been released as singles.[1] Happiness Is Dean Martin peaked at 46 on the Billboard 200, while two of his albums from 1966 were still on the charts.[2]

"I'm Not the Marrying Kind", Martin's recording of Lalo Schifrin's theme song to the 1966 Matt Helm film he starred in, Murderer's Row, appears on this album. It did not appear on the film's soundtrack. Happiness Is Dean Martin was reissued on CD by Hip-O Records in 2009.[3]

Martin finished recording the album two days before an engagement at the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas. His popularity at the Sands was such that Variety reported that "the room could have been filled twice over for each of the two shows".[4]

The album cover shows Dean holding the Mattel doll called "Baby's Hungry!" that was new for 1967. (Mattel toys were sometimes featured on the Dean Martin Variety Hour. In a clip from one show in 1965, Dean sings "Thank Heaven for Little Girls" surrounded by the Mattel doll that was new for 1965, "Baby First Step".)

  1. ^ a b c Happiness Is Dean Martin at AllMusic
  2. ^ Happiness Is Dean Martin – Awards at AllMusic
  3. ^ Happiness Is Dean Martin – Releases at AllMusic
  4. ^ Nick Tosches (13 April 1999). Dino: Living High in the Dirty Business of Dreams. Random House Publishing Group. p. 381. ISBN 978-0-385-33429-7. Retrieved 16 February 2013.