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Verve Jazz Masters 47: Billie Holiday Sings Standards

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Download links and information about Verve Jazz Masters 47: Billie Holiday Sings Standards by Billie Holiday. This album was released in 1995 and it belongs to Blues, Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Pop genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:03:20 minutes.

Artist: Billie Holiday
Release date: 1995
Genre: Blues, Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Pop
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:03:20
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. But Not For Me 3:51
2. When Your Lover Has Gone (1955 No. 2) 4:58
3. All of Me (Live 1946 Carnegie Hall) 2:01
4. Stormy Weather (1952 Version) 3:44
5. Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You (1957 Version) 5:39
6. It Had to Be You (1955 Version) 4:03
7. East of The Sun (And West of The Moon) 2:56
8. Body and Soul (Live 1945 Philharmonic Auditorium, Los Angeles) 3:16
9. April in Paris 3:04
10. Tenderly 3:25
11. When It's Sleepy Time Down South (1959) 4:08
12. You Turned the Tables On Me 3:29
13. Love Is Here to Stay 3:44
14. What's New 4:18
15. We'll Be Together Again 4:26
16. Darn That Dream 6:18

Details

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Of Verve's countless number of Billie Holiday samplers, this one — which is actually a second helping from the Verve Jazz Masters series — is as good as any of them artistically. Like many of its cousins on the shelves, this one takes in the whole cross-section of Holiday's recordings for Norman Granz from an exuberant 1945 JATP concert all the way to her last poignant sessions with the Ray Ellis string orchestra in 1959. Unlike them, this one does not contain songs with which Holiday is inextricably tied, but all of the well-worn standards are given the inimitable Holiday stamp, often in league with many of Granz's legendary soloists. Of course, this is the most troubling period for Holiday scholars, for her voice was going downhill fast in the '50s, yet one has to admit that her Verve recordings often pack an emotional wallop that eclipses most of the earlier ones. A few random highlights: the JATP "All of Me" and "Body and Soul" from the mid-'40s, with Holiday in fresh voice and a whole bunch of star horns wailing in tangled contrapuntal splendor underneath; and a "When It's Sleepy Time Down South" from the Ray Ellis sessions where the combination of Holiday's broken-down voice and exquisite phrasing will break your heart. Verve's thorough discographical entries, here and in the entire Jazz Masters series, are exemplary for what is, after all, an inexpensive sampler for newcomers to jazz. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi