Peggy Lee - The Lost '40s & '50s Capitol Masters

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Album Details

Title: The Lost '40s & '50s Capitol Masters
Artist: Peggy Lee
Release Date: 5/27/2008
Label: Collectors' Choice Music
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits
UPCs: 617742091724, 0617742091724
Genre: Vocal Music
Styles: Show Tunes, Torch Songs, Swing, Vocal Pop, Cast Recordings, Traditional Pop, Vocal Jazz
Moods: Confident, Elegant, Intimate, Smooth, Stylish, Warm, Amiable/Good-Natured, Brassy, Bright, Carefree, Dramatic, Lively, Reflective, Sensual, Sophisticated, Sweet, Cheerful, Gentle, Innocent, Passionate, Playful, Poignant, Reserved, Romantic, Sentimental, Sparkling, Springlike
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 2

Track Listings Disc 1

  1. Ain't Goin' No Place
  2. A Cottage for Sale [#]
  3. Don't Be So Mean to Baby [Alternate Version][Alternate Take][#]
  4. Aren't You Kind of Glad We Did?
  5. I've Had My Moments [#]
  6. Swing Low Sweet Chariot [Alternate Version][Alternate Take][#]
  7. Trouble Is a Man [#]
  8. Music, Maestro, Please [#]
  9. It's Lovin' Time
  10. Ain'tcha Ever Comin' Back
  11. It Takes a Long Long Train with a Red Caboose (To Carry My Blues Away)
  12. The Freedom Train
  13. A Hundred Years from Today [#]
  14. Keep Me in Mind
  15. Love (Your Spell Is Everywhere)
  16. Love Ye [#]
  17. What'll It Getcha [#]
  18. (I Wanna Go Where You Go) Then I'll Be Happy
  19. I Don't Know What to Do Without You Baby [#]
  20. Neon Signs (I'm Gonna Shine Like Neon Too)

Track Listings Disc 2

  1. A Man Wrote a Song
  2. Sunshine Cake
  3. Run for the Round House Nellie
  4. Cannonball Express
  5. Don't Give Me a Ring on the Telephone (Until You Give Me a Ring on My H
  6. If I Could Steal You from Somebody Else [#]
  7. Ay Ay Chug a Chug
  8. Something to Remember You By [#]
  9. Climb Up the Mountain
  10. Pick Up Your Marbles (And Go Home) [#]
  11. That Ol' Devil (Won't Get Me)
  12. If You Turn Me Down (Dee-Own-Down-Down)
  13. Boulevard Café
  14. It Never Happen' to Me
  15. So Far, So Good
  16. My Magic Heart
  17. Telling Me Yes, Telling Me No
  18. Shame on You
  19. Goin' on a Hayride

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2008CDCollectors' Choice Music917

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Despite extensive CD reissues of the recordings of Peggy Lee, there have remained many tracks of hers that never got into the digital era. Indeed, given that she came up at a time when the 78-rpm single was the major recorded format, there are even Lee recordings that were never transferred to LP. This 109-minute, 39-track, two-CD set goes a long way toward unearthing Lee's obscurities, at least from the early part of her solo career. Running chronologically, it begins with her first session for Capitol Records in January 1944, when she was functioning essentially as a band singer with a studio group called the Capitol Jazzmen, and follows her for eight years until the February 1952 session that was her last for Capitol before she spent a five-year sojourn with Decca Records. None of the tracks have been released previously on compact disc; most come from singles, although 14 have never been released before. As such, this constitutes a kind of alternate history of Peggy Lee's early solo years, but actually it is not all that different. True, the performances themselves are unfamiliar, but the musical approaches are not: usually accompanied by her husband, guitarist Dave Barbour, and either a small jazz band or a string-filled orchestra, she either waxes romantic on ballads or playful on uptempo numbers. The singer who had hit with the Latin rhythms and mock-Mexican accent on the novelty "Mañana" tries for the same effect on such songs as "Ay Ay Chug a Chug" and "It Never Happen' to Me." There are songs from contemporary Broadway shows such as Cole Porter's Out of This World ("Climb Up the Mountain") and Jule Styne's Two on the Aisle ("So Far, So Good"). Lee is joined by such complementary partners as the Benny Goodman Sextet ("Keep Me in Mind") and Mel Tormé ("Telling Me Yes, Telling Me No"). There are obscure songs by famous songwriters (George and Ira Gershwin's "Aren't You Kind of Glad We Did?," Irving Berlin's "The Freedom Train") and even some semi-standards ("Music, Maestro, Please," "A Hundred Years from Today," both previously unreleased). Throughout, Lee sings well; that these tracks were lost was no fault of hers. Of course, the album will be of greatest interest to her fans, who probably will understand that there has been some wear and tear on the early tracks, which contain some sonic imperfections. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

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