quarta-feira, 28 de março de 2012

Rosemary Clooney (17)

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - CLAP HANDS! HERE COMES ROSIE! (1960)



1.Clap Hands! Here Comes Rosie!/Everything's Coming up Rosie
2.Give Me the Simple Life
3.Bye Bye Blackbird
4.Aren't You Glad You're You
5.You Got
6.Too Marvelous for Words
7.Something's Gotta Give
8.Hooray for Love
9.Mean to Me
10.Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin'
11.It Could Happen to You
12.Makin' Whoopee

Rosemary Clooney - Fancy Meeting You Here (1958)


 
1. Fancy Meeting You Here
2. (I'd Like to Get You on a) Slow Boat to China
3. I Can't Get Started
4. Hindustan
5. It Happened In Monterey
6. You Came a Long Way From St. Louis
7. Love Won't Let You Get Away
8. How About You?
9. Brazil
10. Isle of Capri
11. Say "Si Si" (Para Vigo Me Voy)
12. Calcutta
13. Love Won't Let You Get Away
 
    Arranged By, Conductor – Billy May
    Concept By [Album] – Sammy Cahn And James Van Heusen*
    Engineer – "Bones" Howe*
    Featuring – Billy May And His Orchestra
    Liner Notes – Bing Crosby
    Orchestra – Billy May And His Orchestra
    Photography [Cover] – Garrett - Howard
    Producer – Simon Rady
    Vocals – Bing Crosby, Rosemary Clooney

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - COME ON-A MY HOUSE (Bear Family 3 Box Set, 1997)



The first of three Bear Family sets of Clooney's complete recordings is uneven stylistically, although a big percentage of it is first-rate. The problem is that Clooney's career from 1947-54 at Columbia Records was divided between sultry, jazz-based big band and popular music, and light novelty tunes of the kind that drove Sinatra away from the label. A big part of this set is built principally around those novelty songs, which Clooney was forced to record. Additionally, due to its chronological sequencing, it opens up with the most dubious of Clooney's novelty numbers, the Tony Pastor & The Clooney Sisters (Rosemary and Betty) pre-Columbia recordings. Pastor was more of a novelty performer than a serious vocalist, so their recordings together, which comprise most of the first disc, are something of an acquired taste. Those songs are followed by her introduction to Columbia Records; there are some hauntingly beautiful numbers interspersed between too many novelty tunes (with Pastor playing too large a part in much of it). Disc Two closes out the Clooney Sisters' career and the Tony Pastor sides -- even the lesser of these numbers is worthwhile, as they display a robust big-band pop sound that was rapidly disappearing. Once Clooney's own solo singing career starts, the level of interest picks up considerably -- her undiluted voice shows a simmering talent coming to a boil right in front of one's ears. Disc Three is weighted down with some less-than-impressive duets teaming Clooney with Guy Mitchell, but is also sparked by her early career masterpieces, "The Lady Is a Tramp" and "I'll Be Around." Then there is "Come On-A My House," which outsold everything Clooney had ever done before. Disc Four is highlighted by the complete Rosemary Clooney-Marlene Dietrich sessions, which were about as perfect a team-up in terms of wryly humorous vibes as you could possibly imagine. Clooney's duets with George Morgan are more satisfying and purposeful than her team-up with Guy Mitchell. Disc Five begins on an upswing, but for every song where she shows some depth and a swinging, hot, jazz-influenced style, there are those weird-ass novelty songs that bust up the quality of her output. Disc Six is the most consistently strong part of the set, sparked by gorgeous renditions of songs Clooney was always meant to record. Disc Seven is devoted entirely to songs that Clooney cut for five movies; it has the same strengths and fewer weaknesses than her career during that period of 1952-54. In all, this is a good job done with some music that, especially in the middle discs, was less than enduring, and makes a great prelude to the next box, where Clooney's career really took off. -- allmusic.com

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - SINGS THE MUSIC OF IRVING BERLIN (1984)



1. It's A Lovely Day Today
2. Be Careful, It's My Heart
3. Cheek To Cheek
4. How About Me
5. The Best Thing For You Would Be Me
6. I Got Lost In His Arms
7. There's No Business Like Show Business
8. Better Luck Next Time
9. What'll I Do
10. Let's Face The Music And Dance

    Rosemary Clooney : vocals
    Warren Vache : cornet, flugelhorn
    Scott Hamilton : tenor saxophone
    John Oddo : piano
    Ed Bickert : guitar (all solo except as noted below, accomanist on "Be Careful, It's My Heart" and "What'll I Do")
    Chris Flory : guitar (first solo on "Cheek to Cheek", rhythm on "I Got Lost in His Arms", "There's No Business Like Show Business", "Better Luck Next Time" and "Cheek to Cheek")
    Phil Flanigan : bass
    Gus Johnson : drums

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - THANKS FOR NOTHING (1963)


1. Hello Faithless   
2. The Rules Of The Road   
3. Just One Of Those Things   
4. All Alone   
5. Black Coffee   
6. A Good Man Is Hard To Find   
7. Baby, The Ball Is Over   
8. The Man That Got Away   
9. I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues   
10. Miss Otis Regrets   
11. Thanks For Nothing   
12. Careless Love

Thanks for Nothing was Rosemary Clooney's only album recorded for Frank Sinatra's Reprise Records. (Love, released by Reprise in 1963, actually had been recorded for RCA Victor in 1961.) It was also her last full-length LP project until she began recording for Concord Records in 1977. In his discography included in Clooney's autobiography, Girl Singer, Michael Feinstein notes that Clooney "isn't very fond of this album because the stresses of her personal life are audible on many of the tracks." But those very stresses, which included marital discord and a dependence on prescription drugs, may have contributed favorably to the final product on an album devoted to songs of love gone wrong, much in the mold of Sinatra's Only the Lonely. Arranger/conductor Bob Thompson isn't interested in making all the tunes into saloon ballads, however. True, here you get Clooney's take on "The Man That Got Away," and it isn't very different from Judy Garland's, while Clooney's interpretation of "Black Coffee" resembles Peggy Lee's. But the album opens and closes with country songs of a type Garland and Lee would never imagine trying, while Clooney sounds right at home. And "Just One of Those Things" (complete with introductory verse) and "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" are taken at a jaunty pace that suggests the singer is going to be able to pick herself up off the barroom floor without assistance. Best of all are Carolyn Leigh and Cy Coleman's "The Rules of the Road" and the title song, which Clooney handles with her clear-spoken matter-of-factness. She may have been fading away personally and professionally at this point in her life, but she had one good album left in her, and this is it. ~ William Ruhlmann

Rosemary Clooney - Swings Softly ... (1960)


1. For You
2. Always Together
3. You ol' Son of a Gun
4. I Wonder
5. Always Be in Love
6. Grieving for You
7. With You and Me
8. Looking for a Boy
9. With the Night
10. Love Eyes
11. Sorry for Myself
12. Keep it Simple

Rosemary Clooney - Love (1963)



Rosemary Clooney - Love (192)

1. Invitation
2. I Wish It So
3. Yours Sincerely
4. Imagination
5. Find the Way
6. How Will I Remember You
7. Why Shouldn't I?
8. More Than You Know
9. You Started Something
10. It Never Entered My Mind
11. If I Forget You
12. Someone to Watch Over Me
13. Black Coffee
14. The Man That Got Away

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - ROSIE SOLVES THE SWINGLE RIDDLE (1961)



1. Get Me To The Church On Time
2. Angry
3. I Get Along Without You Very Well
4. How Am I To Know?
5. You Took Advantage Of Me
6. April In Paris
7. I Ain't Got Nobody
8. Some Of These Days
9. By Myself
10. Shine On Harvest Moon
11. Cabin In The Sky
12. Limehouse Blues

by John Bush

Although Rosemary Clooney worked with Nelson Riddle nearly every week for her '50s radio show, they were together for full LPs much less often -- only this record from 1961 and a 1963 follow-up titled Love. The pair made the most of their first collaboration, devising a program of 12 standards that combined Riddle's pugnacious yet intricate arrangements with Clooney's warm, grand vocals to create a swing record with feeling. Riddle's orchestra roars through his breakneck arrangements for "April in Paris" and "Cabin in the Sky," but Clooney weathers the storm with an elegance that borders on the untroubled. Vocalist fits together with orchestra like hand in glove, since nearly all of the musicians were veterans of her show. [A Bluebird reissue from 2004 added two bonus tracks, "Without Love" and "The Wonderful Season of Love" (the latter was the theme from Return to Peyton Place, directed by her husband, José Ferrer).

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - Sings Country Hits From The Heart (1963)


1.Any Time          
2.Really Don't Want to Know          
3.Just Because          
4.Give Myself a Party          
5.Love Has Come My Way          
6.I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry          
7.Please Help Me I'm Falling          
8.If I Can Stay Away Long Enough          
9.This Ole House          
10.How's the World Treating You          
11.Beautiful Brown Eyes          
12.Kiss Him for Me

Rosemary Clooney Sings Country Hits from the Heart is a 1963 studio album by Rosemary Clooney, arranged by Marty Paich, her only album of country music.

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - BLUE ROSE (1956)



1. Hey Baby   
2. Sophisticated Lady   
3. Me And You 
4. Passion Flower   
5. I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart
6. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)   
7. Grievin'   
8. Blue Rose   
9. I'm Checkin' Out, Goombye   
10. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)   
11. Mood Indigo   
12. If You Were In My Place (What Would You Do?)   
13. Just A-Sittin' And A-Rockin'

While the names Rosemary Clooney and Duke Ellington appear on the cover, the person most responsible for these unusual 1956 recordings was Ellington's regular collaborator, arranger Billy Strayhorn. When the project developed, Clooney was in the midst of a difficult pregnancy and unable to leave Los Angeles. Strayhorn visited her to work on the arrangements, eventually moving in and becoming nurse as well as orchestrator, picking the material with Clooney and arranging familiar Ellington classics and some of his own songs, like "I'm Checking Out (Goombye)," to suit her voice. The situation eventually required that the band and vocal tracks be recorded separately, the first time the technique had been attempted by major artists, and it's remarkable testimony to Strayhorn's writing and supervision that the natural-sounding results were achieved. Clooney's rich timbre, clear diction, and fine rhythmic sense are well suited to the material, and the Ellington band, as always, was both a fine orchestral instrument and a collection of great soloists. There's also an evocatively exotic instrumental performance of Strayhorn's signature "Passion Flower," with Johnny Hodges's trademark alto saxophone standing out. The recording is an unusual chapter in the Ellington band's history, a showcase for Strayhorn's arrangements and an early chance for Clooney to demonstrate just how good a jazz singer lurked behind her lightweight hits of the day. --Stuart Broomer

ROSEMARY CLOONEY & PEREZ PRADO - A TOUCH OF TABASCO (1959)



01. Corazón de melón
02. Like a woman
03. I only have eyes for you
04. Magic is the moonlight (Te quiero, dijiste)
05. In a little spanish town
06. Sway (Quien Sera)
07. Mack the knife
08. Bali Ha'i
09. You do something to me
10. Cucurrucucú paloma
11. I Got plenty o’nuttin'
12. Adios

A Touch of Tabasco is a 1959 studio album by the American jazz singer Rosemary Clooney and the Cuban percussionist Perez Prado. This was the only album that Clooney and Prado recorded together; the album was promoted with bottles of Tabasco sauce.
The album was Clooney's first for her new label, RCA Victor, following her departure from Columbia Records. The liner notes were contributed by Clooney's husband, José Ferrer.

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - LOOK MY WAY/NICE TO BE AROUND (2002)


01.  Half As Much
02.  Roses In The Garden
03.  When Will I Be Loved
04.  Storms Never Last
05.  Look My Way
06.  T'Was A Sunny Day
07.  There I've Said It
08.  I'm Not Lisa
09.  Don't The Good Times (Make It All Worth While)
10.  Singing The Blues
11.  When You Got Love
12.  The Very Thought Of Losing You
13.  You
14.  50 Ways To Leave Your Lover
15.  Send In The Clowns
16.  Music
17.  Thank You Baby
18.  All By Myself
19.  My Little Town
20.  The Hungry Years
21.  I Won't Last A Day Without You
22. Nice to Be around
 

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - SWING AROUND ROSIE (1958)

1. 'Deed I Do   
2. You Took Advantage Of Me   
3. Blue Moon   
4. Sing You Sinners   
5. A Touch Of The Blues   
6. Goody, Goody   
7. Too Close For Comfort   
8. Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me   
9. Moonlight Mississippi (A Whistle Stop Town)   
10. I Wish I Were In Love Again   
11. Sunday In Savannah
12.This Can't Be Love

This is an odd release by Rosemary Clooney, who's accompanied by keyboardist Buddy Cole and an unidentified rhythm section. Although the singer is in great form, Cole's extremely corny arrangements and his very dated sound on both organ and piano (which are frequently overdubbed, often in unison) threaten to make the entire session more of a nostalgia trip than something that will appeal to jazz collectors. Still, Clooney's pure swinging vocals on standards such as "'Deed I Do," "Blue Moon," "Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me," and "This Can't be Love" are very rewarding, in spite of Cole's uninspiring backgrounds. The original Coral LP jacket reproduced in this Verve CD reissue (which will remain in print until May 2005) has a mini-LP paper jacket and sleeve as well as gossip columnist Earl Wilson's inane liner notes. ~ Ken Dryden

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - THE BUDDY COLE & NELSON RIDDLE SESSIONS (2005)

1. 'Deed I Do     
2. You Took Advantage of Me     
3. Blue Moon     
4. Sing You Sinners     
5. A Touch of the Blues     
6. Goody, Goody     
7. Too Close for Comfort     
8. Do Nothin' Till You Hear from Me     
9. Moonlight Mississippi (A Whistle Stop Town)     
10. I Wish I Were in Love Again     
11. Sunday in Savannah     
12. This Can't Be Love     
13. Get Me to the Church on Time     
14. Angry     
15. I Get Along Without You Very Well     
16. How Am I to Know     
17. You Took Advantage of Me     
18. April in Paris     
19. I Ain't Got Nobody (And Nobody Cares for Me)     
20. Some of These Days     
21. By Myself
22. Shine on Harvest Moon     
23. Cabin in the Sky     
24. Limehouse Blues

Buddy Cole and Nelson Riddle Sessions [Remaster]" (08/25/2005) Pop Vocal Clooney, Rosemary, Lone Hill Jazz (Spain)This 25-track anthology gathers two full albums by jazz-pop singer Rosemary Clooney.

BING CROSBY & ROSEMARY CLOONEY - THAT TRAVELLIN' TWO-BEAT (Billy May and his Orchestra, 1964)

That Travellin' Two Beat found both singers at their best.

1-That travellin' two-beat
2-New Vienna Woods
3-Knees up, Mother Brown
4-Roamin' in the Gloamin'
5-Adios señorita
6-Come to the Mardi Gras
7-Hear that band
8-The daughter of Molly Malone
9-The poor people of Paris
10-I get ideas
11-Ciao, ciao bambina
12-That travellin' two-beat (reprise)



ROSEMARY CLOONEY - SINGS RODGERS & HART & HAMMERSTEIN (1990)

BY NOBODY'S TUNE. THANK YOU VERY MUCH.

01. Oh, What A Beautiful Morning
02. People Will Say We're In Love
03. Love, Look Away
04. The Gentleman Is A Dope
05. It Might As Well Be Spring
06. The Sweetest Sounds
07. I Could Write A Book
08. You Took Advantage Of Me
09. The Lady Is A Tramp
10. Little Girl Blue
11. My Romance
12. Yours Sincerely

ROSEMARY CLOONEY - DO YOU MISS NEW YORK? (1993)


 1. Do You Miss New York?
2. Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You
3. As Long As I Live
4. May I Come In
5. Route 66
6. A Beautiful Friendship
7. It's Only A Paper Moon
8. I Ain't Got Nothin' But The Blues
9. I Wish You Love
10. I Get Along Without You Very Well
11. We'll Be Together Again

As is usual for Rosemary Clooney's very consistent string of Concord albums, this is a jazz-oriented set with the highly appealing singer interpreting veteran standards from the '30s and '40s plus a couple of newer songs (Dave Frishberg's "Do You Miss New York?" and "I Wish You Love"). Using a fine sextet with her favorite horn players (tenor man Scott Hamilton and cornetist Warren Vaché) plus her musical director/pianist John Oddo and guitarist Buck Pizzarelli, Clooney is heard in top form. John Pizzarelli makes a guest appearance, sharing the vocal and playing guitar on "It's Only a Paper Moon"; other highlights include "As Long as I Live," "I Ain't Got Nothin' But the Blues," and "We'll Be Together Again." Recommended. ~ Scott Yanow

Personnel: Rosemary Clooney (vocals); John Pizzarelli (vocals, guitar); Scott Hamilton (tenor saxophone); Warren Vache (cornet); John Oddo (piano); Bucky Pizzarelli (guitar); David Finck (bass); Joe Cocuzzo (drums).

Um comentário:

  1. Muy Buenas.
    Es posible bajarse algun disco de Rose Mary Clooney ?
    Necesito una invitacion.?

    ResponderExcluir