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You're Mine, You - 1939-1950

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Download links and information about You're Mine, You - 1939-1950 by Mary Ann McCall. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Jazz, Pop genres. It contains 26 tracks with total duration of 01:17:34 minutes.

Artist: Mary Ann McCall
Release date: 2005
Genre: Jazz, Pop
Tracks: 26
Duration: 01:17:34
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Big Wig In the Wigwam 2:43
2. 720 In the Books 2:48
3. Busy As a Bee 2:51
4. Romance In the Dark 3:27
5. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams 2:47
6. Swing Low Sweet Clarinet 3:06
7. Money Is Honey 2:52
8. Big Butter and Egg Man 3:09
9. On Time 3:02
10. Trouble Is a Man 3:12
11. I Got It Bad 3:15
12. Detour Ahead 3:13
13. Jamaica Rhumba 3:13
14. More Than You Know 3:06
15. You're My Thrill 3:09
16. I Hadn't Anyone Till You 2:42
17. You're Mine You 3:09
18. I'm Yours 2:54
19. Nice Work If You Can Get It 3:04
20. Sunday 2:20
21. There Must Be Something Better Than Love 2:57
22. Nothin' from Nothin' 3:03
23. I Cried for You 2:55
24. The Sky Is Crying 2:53
25. (What Can I Say) After I've Said I'm Sorry 2:35
26. Until the Real Thing Comes Along 3:09

Details

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A fine singer from the swing era who was always underrated, Mary Ann McCall deserved much more fame than she received. After an unrecorded stint with Tommy Dorsey in late 1938, she made her recording debut with Woody Herman ("Big Wig in the Wigwam") and gained some attention for her work with Charlie Barnet during 1939-1940. Following a period off the scene, she joined Woody Herman's Herd in 1946, staying with the band until its breakup. She recorded four numbers as a leader in 1947 and then was a member of Herman's Second Herd during 1948-1949. Her solo career, which included a couple numbers recorded with Artie Shaw's Gramercy Five, never caught on the way one might have expected, though she returned to the jazz scene on an occasional basis into the 1980s. You're Mine, You has the best of her recordings of 1939-1950, including numbers with the Barnet and Herman orchestras; her early solo session; the Shaw titles; and a 1950 date that includes trumpeter Red Rodney, tenor saxophonist Al Cohn, and baritonist Gerry Mulligan. Among the more memorable performances on this long overdue and definitive collection are "Romance in the Dark," "Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams," "Trouble Is a Man," "Detour Ahead," "You're My Thrill" (one of McCall's best-known recordings), "Sunday," and "I Cried for You."