Disc: 1 1	The Big Dipper 2	True Confession 3	ABBA Dabba (One of the Arabian Knights) 4	The One Rose (That's Left in My Heart) 5	I Double Dare You 6	Two Dreams Got Together 7	Love Is Here to Stay 8	Always and Always 9	Martha 10	You're An Education 11	Romance in the Dark 12	Cry, Baby, Cry 13	Stolen Heaven 14	I Married An Angel 15	If It Rains, Who Cares? 16	You Go to My Head 17	Put Your Heart in a Song 18	My Reverie 19	Change Partners 20	At Long Last Love 21	My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice 22	Summer Souvenirs 23	Heart and Soul 24	Old Folks
  Disc: 2 1	Who Blew Out the Flame 2	Design for Dancing 3	My Heart Belongs to Daddy 4	Jeepers Creepers 5	The Devil with the Devil 6	For Men Only 7	Deep Purple 8	I Get Along Without You Very Well (Except Sometimes) 9	(I'm Afraid) the Masquerade Is Over 10	I Want My Share of Love 11	Over the Rainbow 12	Comes Love 13	In a Persian Market 14	I'll Remember 15	The Little Man Who Wasn't There 16	An Apple for the Teacher 17	Johnson Rag 18	Limehouse Blues 19	The Nearness of You 20	Rockin' Chair 21	Because of You 22	Let Me Off Uptown 23	The Dickey Bird Song 24	On a Slow Boat to China
 
  Larry Clinton was a trumpeter, trombonist and clarinettist who, when in his twenties, became a successful arranger for Jimmy Dorsey, Tommy Dorsey, Glen Gay's Casa Loma Orchestra and Bunny Berigan during the mid-1930s before starting his own orchestra in 1937. Playing a mixture of current pop in the sweet style, ambitious jazz-styled instrumentals and swing arrangements of classical pieces, he had a string of nearly 40 hits through into the early '40s, and when he picked up the threads after service during WWII. Most of his hits featured the fine voice of his star vocalist Bea Wain, whose contributions were a key element of his success. This excellent-value 48-track 2-CD set comprises all his 38 hits plus other selected releases on the Victor, Bluebird and Decca labels, many featuring Bea Wain, and features the No. 1s Cry, Baby, Cry, Heart And Soul, My Reverie, and Deep Purple, along with sixteen other Top 10 hits, with many examples of the early commercial recordings of some of the landmark compositions of the Great American Songbook era. Along with Bea Wain, other featured vocalists are Dick Todd, Ford Leary, Mary Dugan, Helen Southern, Peggy Mann and Butch Stone. The collection provides not only a thoroughly entertaining showcase for a top class orchestra about which not much is heard these days, as well as for the vocal talents of Bea Wain, but also an enlightening overview of some of the most popular music of those years. |