“This guy should have been a massive star. His voice is incredible.”
EXCLUSIVE: Hear the first single from the lost 1977 album by David Forman
HIGH MOON RECORDS and RECORD LUNG are proud to present: “Who You Been Talking To,” the title track and lead single from the newly-unearthed album by the singer and songwriter, David Forman.
Recorded for Arista Records in Los Angeles in 1977, but never released, the album Who You Been Talking To is a lost masterpiece of blue-eyed soul and literary street poetry produced by the legendary Jack Nitzsche (Neil Young, Rolling Stones, Phil Spector) and featuring an all-star cast of L.A. session players including Ry Cooder, Jim Keltner, David Lindley, Fred Tackett, Tim Drummond, and Flaco Jimenez.
David Forman?
“Not just a brilliant lyricist…one of the most interesting writers of the Seventies.” –Rolling Stone
“He’s got it. He’s always had it.” – Aaron Neville
“This guy should have been a massive star. His voice is incredible.”– Jim Keltner (drummer for John Lennon, Bob Dylan, George Harrison)
“The songwriting, production, and singing on this ‘lost’ David Forman album are, to my ears, as good as the best work of Tom Waits, Elvis Costello, Joan Armatrading, and John Prine.” – Danny Goldberg (manager of Nirvana and Steve Earle, former President of Atlantic Records)
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FROM HIGH MOON RECORDS:
In 1976, Dave Marsh of Rolling Stone declared David Forman a songwriter on the same level as Bruce Springsteen, Warren Zevon, and Tom Waits, comparing his vocals to Curtis Mayfield and Smokey Robinson. His self-titled debut album for Arista Records, produced by Joel Dorn, was hailed as “an artistic success” before Forman seemingly vanished from the music world.
But Forman didn’t vanish—he recorded a second album.
Decades later, in 2022, a group of friends with a vinyl listening club – journalist Joe Hagan, photographer Tim Davis, and museum curator Joel Smith – became entranced by Forman’s first album, which Smith found in a record shop for $2, intrigued by the portrait of Forman on the back cover by legendary downtown photographer Peter Hujar. They soon discovered that Forman lived only a few miles away. Eager to learn about the rumored second record, they sought Forman out and took him to lunch. Forman agreed to play the album for them, sparking a passionate campaign to get the record released.
Who You Been Talking To captures Forman at the height of his powers, blending doo-wop and Brill Building R&B with 1970s sophistication, Randy Newman’s wit with Aaron Neville’s melismatic vocal style. The album opens with “Who You Been Talking To,” a smoky Motown groove that matches sultry blue-eyed soul to a worldly-wise lyric full of downtown New York attitude. “Let It Go Now” features Forman’s falsetto against Nitzsche’s cavernous production, topped with a gigantic surf guitar riff and columns of angelic backup singers. “A-Train Lady” is a quintessential New York subway soul serenade with a Drifters groove, contrasted to “Little Asia,” a sphinxlike ballad of high cinematic intensity featuring Ry Cooder on Colombian tiple. Throughout, Forman updates the street-corner doo wop and Brill Building songcraft of his Brooklyn youth with the urbane sophistication of the late 1970s, evoking a world that lives somewhere between memory and myth.
Forman rose from folk-rock obscurity when he made a demo backed by Aaron and Charles Neville and Bernard Purdy for Bell Records in 1973 and was championed by legendary rock critics Stephen Holden and Paul Nelson. Holden, who compared his voice to Marvin Gaye and his songwriting to Randy Newman, helped land Forman a deal at Arista.
The second in the two-record deal Forman signed in 1976, Who You Been Talking To was recorded at The Sound Factory on Selma Avenue in Hollywood over two weeks in late summer 1977 (just days after Elvis Presley’s death) and engineered by Dave Hassinger, who had worked with the Rolling Stones and Frank Sinatra. Despite the extraordinary musicianship and Forman’s remarkable vocal performances, Arista Records head Clive Davis chose not to release the album, claiming he didn’t hear a radio hit, instead offering to return it to Forman to shop elsewhere.
Devastated, Forman declined, and the tapes went into storage for nearly fifty years.
The album existed only as a reel-to-reel tape that Forman had sent to Hal Willner, the late musical director for Saturday Night Live. In the early ’00s, Willner rediscovered the tape in his archive and returned it to Forman, who had it digitized but lost the original tape in a move. Then, while clearing out his late father’s archive, Jack Nitzsche Jr. discovered two rough mix tapes sequenced by Nitzsche himself and sent them to Forman. These tapes became the source material for Who You Been Talking To, mastered by Steve Addabbo (Bob Dylan’s boxed sets for Sony), who spent considerable time bringing Forman’s vocals forward from Nitzsche’s dense, layered production.
David Forman’s story is one of bohemian adventure and missed opportunities: he sang doo-wop with Aaron Neville in Brooklyn; worked on Robert Downey Sr.’s 1972 film, Greaser’s Palace, where he first met Jack Nitzsche; sailed to the Caribbean on his own ketch; helped Philippe Petit prepare for his legendary World Trade Center wire walk between the Twin Towers in 1974; and became a years-long subject for legendary downtown photographerPeter Hujar. Forman’s songs have been covered by Marianne Faithfull and Mink Deville, and recorded by both Aaron Neville and the Neville Brothers.
The album is accompanied by deluxe packaging with extensive liner notes by acclaimed journalist Joe Hagan, featuring exclusive interviews with David Forman, Aaron Neville, Jim Keltner, songwriting partner David Levine, and other collaborators. The package includes rare photographs by legendary downtown New York photographer Peter Hujar (whose other subjects included Susan Sontag, William Burroughs, and Candy Darling), along with never-before-seen memorabilia from Forman’s extraordinary life.
Sophisticated, soulful, and utterly distinctive, Who You Been Talking To places Forman in the pantheon of great 1970s singer-songwriters where he always belonged. With its striking artwork and packaging, designed as Arista might have released it in 1977, this album offers the full spectrum of Forman’s artistry, grit, humor, and intelligence to the world.
Release Date: Friday, January 23, 2026
PRE-ORDER ‘WHO YOU BEEN TALKING TO’
Tracklist:
01 Who You Been Talking To
02 A-Train Lady
03 Thirty Dollars
04 Painted in a Corner
05 Let It Go Now
06 Midnight Mambo
07 Little Asia
08 What Is So Wonderful
09 We Both Talk Too Much
10 Losing
11 Now That I Told You
Produced by Jack Nitzsche
Mastered by Steve Addabbo
Liner Notes by Joe Hagan
Composer and Lyricist: David Forman
Co-Lyricist: David Levine
Musicians:
David Forman – vocals, piano, Hammond organ, 12-string acoustic guitar
Jack Nitzsche – Fender Rhodes, arrangements
Jim Keltner – drums
Tim Drummond – bass
Ry Cooder – guitars, Colombian tiple
David Lindley – guitars
Fred Tackett – guitars
Scott Matthews – guitars
Flaco Jiménez – accordion
Steve Douglas – saxophone
Earl Turbinton – bass clarinet
Sid Sharp and the Hollywood Strings – orchestra
Edna Wright, Sidney Barnes, Bobby King – backup vocals
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I was one of the critics who raved about David Forman and his first album, for Newsday. (The pull quote is on page 5 of the liner notes book, at the top of the Arista trade ad.) We spent some time together at his loft downtown, living the title of his song "Smoky China Tea." He's not just into doo-wop, but had a vocal group called Little Isidore and the Inquisitors, and they could do the entire repertory of my favorite cult doo-wop group, The Charts. ("Desiree", "Dance Girl").
This is incredibly exciting news. I've loved Forman's voice since hearing him on the "Largo" project assembled by Rick Chertoff and members of the Hooters in '98, and was excited to get my hands on a vinyl copy of the first album years ago. Can't wait to dig in!