Disco de Doris Day: «Lullaby of Broadway»

- Título:Lullaby of Broadway
- Fecha de publicación:2006-08-29
- Tipo:Audio CD
- Sello discográfico:Rex
- UPC:827565003921
Información del disco
Contenido
- 1 Somebody Loves Meimg 2:53
- 2 My Darling, My Darlingimg 2:37
- 3I've Never Been in Love Before
- 4 No Two Peopleimg 2:31
- 5It's the Sentimental Thing to Do
- 6 Love Somebody Doris Day, Tommy Dorsey and Buddy Clarkimg 3:06
- 7Pretty Baby Doris Day and Harry James
- 8 A Guy Is A Guyimg 2:44
- 9 April In Parisimg 3:17
- 10Thoughtless Doris Day and The Modernaires
- 11Papa Won't You Dance With Me?
- 12 Mister Tap Toeimg 2:18
- 13The Second Star to the Right
- 14Confess
- 15We Kiss in a Shadow
- 16That's the Way He Does It
- 17You Can't Lose Me
- 18I'll Be Around
- 19That's What Makes Paris Paree
- 20If You Will Marry Me
- 21Why Should We Both Be Lonely
- 22 Lullaby Of Broadwayimg 2:55
- 23Powder Your Face With Sunshine Doris Day and Buddy Clark
- 24Cuddle Up A Little Closer
- 25I'll See You In My Dreams
Análisis - Product Description
Despite its familiar title, Warner Bros.' Lullaby of Broadway was an original movie musical, albeit one in which nearly all the songs were vintage titles owned by the film company. And nearly all of them were performed by Doris Day. Warner did not have a record company, so there could be no soundtrack album, but Day had a contract with Columbia Records, and she had enjoyed considerable success the previous year by recording tie-in albums from her films Young Man With a Horn and Tea for Two. This Lullaby of Broadway LP soon joined its predecessors in the Top Five. In the film, Day had been paired with Gene Nelson, who had been promoted from the second male lead in Tea for Two. Since Nelson had appeared with Day on the Tea for Two LP, you might have expected him to turn up here, too, but he didn't. It was just Day, accompanied by the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet on the title song, "Fine and Dandy" (which was not in the film), and the newly written "I Love the Way You Say Goodnight," and by an orchestra conducted by Frank Comstock on the rest. (Nelson's feature, "Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart," was absent, of course.) Since the songs are just a bunch of standards from old films and musicals, the connection to the movie simply provides an excuse for Day to try out vintage material written by the likes of George Gershwin and Cole Porter, and she does well by it. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide