Day By Day/Day By NightDoris Day
Release Date: 11/14/2000
Original Release:
2000
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 395204_CD
UPC # 090431648926
Label: Collectables Records
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Doris Day
Artist: Paul Weston Distributor: Gotham Distributing Corp. Notes: 2 LPs on 1 CD: DAY BY DAY (1956)/DAY BY NIGHT (1957). Personnel includes: Doris Day (vocals); Paul Weston (arranger, conductor). Includes liner notes by Mark Marymount. Originally released on Columbia (942) & Columbia (8089). Personnel: Doris Day (vocals); Barney Kessel (guitar); Frank Emilio Flynn (vibraphone). Liner Note Authors: Stephen Munns; Mark Marymont. Recording information: 1957-1959. When Doris Day freed herself from those cotton candy films she appeared in, where her singing for the most part was limited to cute novelty tunes, she showed that she could successfully sink her vocal teeth into some solid standard material. The LPs compiled on this CD come from the late '50s, when she was recording for Columbia with backing from an orchestra headed by Paul Weston. The songs fall into two categories. The first are those where Weston employed a large, sugary string section. The far more interesting tracks are those where the strings were held out and Day was backed by a dance band group with some jazz personages present. "Hello My Lover, Goodbye" and "I Hadn't Anyone Till You" feature Barney Kessel on guitar and consummate studio musician Ted Nash's alto sax. There is an unidentified muted trumpet on an excellent interpretation of "But Not for Me." It could well be Don Fagerquist, who worked with Weston on several occasions. Day will never be confused with a jazz singer. But given the way she could put over a song with her impeccable timing and phrasing, whether she made it into the jazz singer society was basically immaterial. She was a top-of-the-line traditional popular singer who could wrench a feeling of intimacy from a romantic ballad. Moreover, her swinging credentials were solid as she bounces along on such cuts as "I Hadn't Anyone Till You," "Don't Take Your Love From Me," and "Close Your Eyes." The Collectable collection is Doris Day at her best and that means outstanding vocalizing by one of the more popular singers of the 1950s and 1960s, whose work has stood the test of time. ~ Dave Nathan
Regarded as a beloved film icon, the effervescently blonde Doris Day was a sort of Betty to Marilyn Monroe's Veronica, and starred in a series of popular movie romps from the early 1950s through the early `60s. But before that, she'd had a flourishing career as a radio personality and vocalist, most notably with bandleader Les Brown. She enjoyed several big hits, including the sweet singalong "Que Sera Sera" and her signature tune "Sentimental Journey," which she recorded several times. For the most part, Day retired from moviemaking and recording on the cusp of the `70s, during which her appeal was not in step with the zeitgeist, and has only reemerged professionally a few times since.
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