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Music CD - Various Artists: Night and Day: The Cole Porter Songbook

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Music CD: Night and Day: The Cole Porter Songbook Artist: Various Artists
List Price: $11.98
Our Price: $5.80
Your Save: $ 6.18 ( 52% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Polygram Records
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. I've Got You Under My Skin - Dinah Washington 2. Love For Sale - Shirley Horn 3. Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love) - Louis Armstrong 4. Anything Goes - Ella Fitzgerald 5. What Is This Thing Called Love - Mel Torme 6. You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To - Helen Merrill 7. At Long Last Love - Bill Henderson 8. I Love You - Anita O'day 9. Just One Of Those Things - Louis Armstrong 10. It's De-Lovely - Sarah Vaughan 11. Always True To You In My Fashion - Blossom Dearie 12. I Concentrate On You - Fred Astarie 13. I Get A Kick Out Of You - Dinah Washington 14. In The Still Of The Night - Billy Eckstine 15. Easy To Love - Billie Holiday 16. Night And Day - Ella Fitzgerald 17. Ev'rytime We Say Goodbye - Betty Carter
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0042284720229 Label: Polygram Records Manufacturer: Polygram Records Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Polygram Records Release Date: 1990-10-05 Studio: Polygram Records
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: ...and let me give it five stars more !!! Comment: Night and Day: The Cole Porter Songbook gives us quite a few wonderful songs and ballads by the great Cole Porter. Cole Porter's music was extremely elegant; and just one listen proves that this is anything but elevator music! The quality of the sound is very good; and I like that artwork, too!
The great Dinah Washington starts things off with a live recording of "I've Got You Under My Skin;" this jazzy rendition uses the drums to mark the best and Dinah sings this to perfection-and beyond! Dinah also enjoys an excellent rapport with her audience; and her uncanny sense of timing makes "I've Got You Under My Skin" a very memorable number. Louis Armstrong also performs "Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)" with panache--and how's about that piano arrangement? The piano playing is very well done and it complements Louis' vocals very well. "Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)" is clearly a major highlight of this album. Great!
Ella Fitzgerald, the First Lady Of Song, performs a heavenly version of "Anything Goes;" this Cole Porter tune never sounded better than when Ella sang this version! Ella's excellent diction enhances her performance quite a bit. Listen also for Helen Merrill to perform "You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To" with a romantic treatment that makes this very fine music for slow dancing with your sweetheart all alone in your living room!
Louis Armstrong returns to perform "Just One Of Those Things" with so much style it amazes me every time I hear Louis sing this. Louis' gravelly voice lends itself perfectly to this ballad and the jazzy upbeat tempo makes this a huge highlight of this album. Thank you, Louis! In addition, there's also the great Sarah Vaughan singing" It's De-Lovely;" "It's De-Lovely" starts with a fine musical flourish and when Sarah comes in this number truly takes flight! I'm very impressed.
Fred Astaire does a magnificent job as he sings "I Concentrate On You;" this song features Fred front and center--and that's all right by me! "I Concentrate On You" has a very smooth jazz style arrangement and it all works very well for this ballad. Dinah Washington also sings a fine treatment of "I Get A Kick Out Of You;" "I Get A Kick Out Of You" sparkles brightly when Dinah belts this out with all her might! Terrific!
Billie Holiday does "Easy To Love" with her usual sublime treatment that she gave every ballad she ever sang; and the music that goes with Billie's singing sounds very jazzy and elegant at once. Ella Fitzgerald sings "Night And Day" with a fantastic arrangement for the drums and percussion; and the CD ends strong with Betty Carter performing "Ev'rytime We Say Goodbye." This makes a fine ending for an incredible album of timeless music.
Cole Porter wrote some remarkably beautiful music during his stay here on Earth; and I highly recommend this for his fans. People who like classic pop and jazz vocals will also want this CD in their collections.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Another dust collector Comment: I thought this recording would be better than it was. It's sitting on my shelf getting dusty. Very disappointing.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Performers not up to Cole Porter standards. Comment: Being 78 and having lived through the heyday of stage musicals, I suppose I have a certain bias. However, this does NOT justify The DESTRUCTIVE "modern treatment" given by these performers, many of whom do not appeal to me at all. If they want to ruin some music, have them ruin some of the "modern stuff", SOME of which I consider trash. I am very sorry I listened to it, and even more sorry that I purchased it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: love porter Comment: If you really liked the old Irving Berlin, Gershwin or Porter songs from the 1940-1950's then this is one that you must get. Has all the major hits from this great man.
Customer Rating:      Summary: a must have Comment: The best way to get into jazz music
Cole Porter with Gerschwin is a major composer of the century
All these versions of american standards are very interesting and rich
The very true soul of jazz
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Editorial Reviews:
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Cole Porter's songs have a unique charm. Whether conveying the bantering, urbane wit of "I Get a Kick out of You" or the affecting depths of sentiment in "Every Time We Say Goodbye," his lyrics are matched to his melodies with a conversational ease. No matter how hard Porter might have worked at those effects, his efforts are invisible. That seeming nonchalance is conveyed magnificently here by a complement of wonderful singers, including Sarah Vaughan, Betty Carter, and Shirley Horn. Drawn largely from Verve's immense store of 1950s and 1960s recordings, the CD presents some ideal matches of singer and song, from the rhythmic vitality of Louis Armstrong's "Let's Do It" to the glorious depths of Billy Eckstine's "In the Still of the Night." --Stuart Broomer
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