They Can't Take These Songs Away From Me [ORIGINAL RECORDINGS REMASTERED] 2CD SET
R 951
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They Can't Take These Songs Away From Me [ORIGINAL RECORDINGS REMASTERED] 2CD SET
This high quality 2CD set is chock full of rare delights from the unparalleled Connie Boswell. Connie was not only a singer of otherworldly beauty, with an impossible sense of swing, she was also a multi-instrumentalist, arranger, actor, composer and humanitarian. Ella Fitzgerald famously named Connie as her main influence, and as leader of the immortal hot-jazz vocal group, The Boswell Sisters, Connie influenced other artists ranging from The Andrews Sisters to Artie Shaw. Connie's silky, Louisiana-accented voice, brilliant jazz phrasing and phenomenal interpretive abilities make her someone no fan of jazz or classic pop should miss. With this set, we have been given a multitude of recordings new to CD, which nicely complement tracks on other existing compilations. The songs featured range from 1931 to 1946. The earliest song here is the rollicking "Concentratin' (On You)", featuring the likes of Manny Klien, Eddie Lang and Jimmy Dorsey. Both Dorsey brothers are featured on the infectious "Me Minus You". On "I'll Never Say 'Never Again' Again", Connie and the exuberant musicians of Ambrose & His Orchestra gradually nudge one another higher and higher into the swing stratosphere. Dinah finds the accompanying jazz combo given an extraordinary amount of solo space, which is put to great use, and helps to illustrate why Connie was so beloved by jazz musicians. There are also frequent appearances of orchestras led by the likes of John Scott Trotter, Harry Sosnick and most notably Victor Young, who works wonders on Connie's softer material. Crosby fans will be excited to see no fewer than six duets with Bing, including some rare radio stuff, such as a live version of "Basin Street Blues" and a comedic take on "Everything Happens To Me". Another Crosby-related wonderment occurs with the five songs on which Connie is accompanied either by Bob Crosby's full orchestra or his Bob Cats. This innovative Dixieland band recorded several brilliant classics with Connie, including "Ah! So Pure - Martha", a profoundly joyous work which I unreservedly put forth as a highlight of all recorded sound. This set also features some amazingly balladry and considering what she did for his immortal "All Alone", it is no wonder that Irving Berlin named Connie as 'the finest ballad singer in the business'. On Jerome Kern's "Look For The Silver Lining" and the Gershwin compositions, "Soon" and "They Can't Take That Away From Me", Connie exhibits a talent so rare that her current forgotten status is incomprehensible. If one examines Connie's work from the twenties and thirties with The Boswell Sisters, her solo sides and her 50s LPs, it should become apparent that Connie deserves to be remembered and enjoyed alongside Billie Holiday, Bing Crosby, Louis Armstrong, Frank Sinatra and other masters of the 20th century. These two discs are an important step in boosting Connie Boswell's artistic legacy, and helping people discover this magical music which like fine wine, has aged so nicely. That illustrious songstress, the late and great Ella Fitzgerald, entering an amateur contest at the Harlem Opera House in 1934 as a dancer, recalled: "It was a dare from some friends. They bet me I wouldn't go on. I got up there and got cold feet. I was going to dance. The man said since I was up there I had better do something. So I tried to sing like Connie Boswell". She won! In reply to a question posed some years later: "Who influenced me?" There was only one singer who influenced me. I tried to sing like her all the time, because everything she did made sense musically, and that singer was Connie Boswell.