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You can't go wrong with this collection - Included are songs that will make you smile & some to make you cry, and no one sings them like Billie Holiday. Buy it, then just sit back and enjoy.
This is a great album and has the one song on it that I really love - The Very Thought of You.
This is a short song, and it is well sung. Billie Holiday was a star-crossed talent. Some nice lines, such as:"But when he mistreats meMakes me feel so blue.""I Can't Get Started": This Gershwin song is wondrous. Some of her best works are included, although 13 cuts cannot possibly do justice to her complete oeuvre.Let's take a look at a sampling of the songs."Miss Brown to You": Benny Goodman plays with the Todd Wilson Orchestra--a nice group to accompany Holliday.
One line:"Now I'm broken heartedI can't get started with you."This is a terrific wedding of Count Basie and Billie Holiday."Body and Soul": Nice orchestral backing. She displays a smooth, rich voice. The words are clear and easy to pick up. There are only 13 cuts on this CD--but what a great set of cuts they are. Some key lines:I spend my days in longing;I'm wondering why it's me who's lonely.I'm all for you, body and soul."She can't believe that her man is throwing romance away. Nice blues sensibility.
Holiday is backed by Count Basie. Her voice is lush and smooth.
An affecting song.To conclude, this is a fine CD, even though it has a small number of tunes. But her talent was real, and this CD provides concrete evidence of that.
Her voice intertwines well with the instruments. It is evocative.
Nice instrumental backing."Billie's Blues": This song is backed by her own orchestra, with Bunny Berrigan and Artie Shaw--not bad. She sings of her loneliness.
A great introduction to Billie Holiday's work.
Billie imparts the sense of all the pain in her past and how she's happy to have found a new man who loves her more. We will never see another quite like Billie; this CD of thirteen of Billie's greatest hits from Sony doesn't even begin to scrape the surface of what this remarkably talented lady could do.The CD track set begins with a number that's actually sassy as well as jazzy; Billie sings of how Emily Brown's "comin' to town;" but it's "Miss Brown to you." Listen for Benny Goodman on clarinet and Roy Eldridge on trumpet. Teddy Wilson does a great job on piano, too. The musicians work wonders before Billie even comes in; but when Billie comes in the number soars and Billie takes flight. During her all too brief life she gave us more than most entertainers and "celebrities" do in a full lifetime. Billie's excellent diction, coupled with her light and clear voice, lets her perform "The Very Thought Of You" with twice the panache that any other singer could ever have infused into it. Teddy plays piano; Benny Goodman plays clarinet and Roy Eldridge plays trumpet. Despite the passage of time and the surface noise on this track, I distinctly feel everything Billie put into this song.
Billie was unlucky in love and the pain of this problem helps her to deliver "I Can't Get Started" as if the lyrics were a intimate, personal and very private confession to you from the bottom of her heart. This is not just another chanteuse singing a ballad; this is Billie Holiday once again sharing her most intimate feelings with her audience. The song credits and recording dates are there for you, too. Billie's voice is light and clear as a bell; yet she imparts all the right emotions to her audience.
"I Cried For You" gives Billie the chance to sing of how she cried for a man who left her--but she no longer cares for him and she won't waste one minute more worrying about that loser. Once again, Billie recorded this with The Teddy Wilson Orchestra. Her voice was the ultimate instrument which could convey all the sorrows of her personal life as she sang about life, love and the pain of being discriminated against because she was African-American. Billie sings so well because she truly means every word of the lyrics. Ever. Wow."God Bless The Child" was one of Billie's most famous signature songs; and she delivers this with all her might. And ooh, how they jam.
Excellent."Billie's Blues" stuns you with its sublime treatment of the blues; Billie wrote this number and Artie Shaw himself plays clarinet. The CD track set ends with the classic "Body And Soul." Billie sings of how she wants a man who doesn't love her in return. Billie Holiday could sing jazz and the blues unlike any other singer. Roy Eldridge plays trumpet and I predict you will enjoy this number very, very much."Gloomy Sunday" became associated with many a suicide; anyone deep in despair and hopelessness can identify with "Gloomy Sunday." Billie sings this so well because of the countless times she experienced these very emotions in her private life. "The Very Thought Of You" swings ever so slightly to infuse this ballad with just the right amount of energy and romantic effect. Billie sings from the bottom of her heart as she draws upon her personal pain from unrequited love.
Billie sings about how her man treats her so poorly; and you believe every word she sings--she's THAT good at sharing her feelings from the depths of her soul. We will never again see another Billie Holiday. Even though Billie was only 20 when this was recorded, she was already working with the best."What A Little Moonlight Can Do" gets a breakneck pace and a jazzy interpretation that would make any jazz artist green with envy. The liner notes include an informative essay by Timme Rosenkrantz; and the black and white pictures of Holiday are very tastefully arranged. Teddy Wilson again plays piano; and listen for Harry Carney on both the clarinet and the baritone saxophone. "I Can't Get Started" is a number recorded live when Billie performed at The Meadowbrook Ballroom in Cedar Grove, New Jersey with Count Basie & His Orchestra.
As always, Billie's delivery is flawless. We are so much richer for Billie sharing her endless talents with us; and fortunately we can continue to experience her talents on CD for ages to come.
Billie Holiday is an amazing artist and I am proud to have her CD.
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