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4.246 Ft
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1. | You're A Sweetheart
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2. | This Is New
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3. | You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby
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4. | Who Can I Turn To Now?
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5. | My Ideal
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6. | Can't Get Out Of This Mood
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7. | East Of The Sun
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8. | I Left My Sugar Standing In The Rain
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9. | Moonstruck
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10. | Limehouse Blues
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11. | As Time Goes By
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12. | Keepin' Out Of Mischief Now
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13. | Stars Fell On Alabama
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14. | Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans?
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Jazz
Recorded at Webster Hall, NYC on June 12 (#13 & 14), September 25 (#4, 5, 7, 11), September 27 (#1, 3, 8, 12) and September 28 (#2, 6, 9, 10), 1956
Lee Wiley (vocal) with: On #13-14: Billy Butterfield, trumpet; Cutty Cutshall, trombone; Peanuts Hucko, clarinet; Deane Kincaide, baritone sax; Lou Stein, piano; Barry Galbraith, guitar; Bob Haggart, bass; Cliff Leeman, drums.
On #4, 5, 7 & 11: Ray Beckenstein, flute, clarinet, alto sax; Romeo Penque, flute, oboe, English horn; Moe Wechsler, piano, Barry Galbraith, guitar; Milt Hinton, bass; Don Lamond, drums; Paul Winter, Leo Kruczek, violins; Dave Schwartz, viola; Jane Putnam, harp.
On #1, 3, 8, 12: Billy Butterfield, trumpet, Lou McGarity, trombone; Peanuts Hucko, clarinet; Al Klink, tenor sax; Moe Wechsler, piano, Barry Galbraith, guitar; Milt Hinton, bass; Don Lamond, drums.
On #2, 6, 9, 10: Nick Travis, Bernie Glow, trumpet; Urbie Green, Bob Alexander, trombones; Ray Beckenstein, Romeo Penque, reeds; Al Epstein, tenor sax; Danny Bank, baritone sax; Moe Wechsler, piano, Barry Galbraith, guitar; Milt Hinton, bass; Don Lamond, drums.
#1-12 originally issued as West Of The Moon (RCA Victor LPM 1408) #13 & 14 originally issued on Dave Garroway's The Wide, Wide World Of Jazz (RCA Victor LPM 1325)
"Wiley was the first singer to do songbook albums but only made a handful of LPs in her career. Of these, at least two, 1950's Night in Manhattan and 1956's West of the Moon are among the greatest jazz vocal albums ever recorded." --- Will Friedwald, New York Sun
Wrap Yourself in the Warmth and Sensual Delivery of Lee Wiley
Influenced by Mildred Bailey and Ethel Waters, Lee Wiley's sensual, whiskey-soaked voice found its greatest champions in musicians like Joe Bushkin, Jess Stacy and members of the illustrious Condon Mob. Despite her acumen for picking great songs and her way with a lyric, Wiley found little success beyond the jazz world and her opportunities to record were shamefully scant.
"West Of The Moon," recorded in 1956, was the first of two albums she made for RCA Victor. And here she is fittingly paired with arranger Ralph Burns whose richly-voiced orchestrations are ideal for her style and delivery. Burns uses an octet, a scaled-down 12-piece big band and an ensemble with two woodwinds and a string quartet on this projects. Coupled with ideal song selection, the results are superb and include classic renditions of "Who Can I Turn To Now," "Moonstruck," "East Of The Sun" and "Can't Get Out Of This Mood."
Added to the original album are two selections ("Stars Fell On Alabama" and "Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans?") made earlier the same year for a Dave Garroway project, arranged by Deane Kincaide for an all-star octet. |
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