Helen Merrill - Anything Goes (2019)
Artist: Helen Merrill
Title: Anything Goes
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Nagel Heyer Records
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:43:46
Total Size: 243 mb | 564 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Anything Goes
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: Nagel Heyer Records
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:43:46
Total Size: 243 mb | 564 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Comes Love
02. When I Fall in Love
03. I'm Just a Lucky So-And-So
04. Summertime
05. The Masquerade Is Over
06. You Win Again
07. Mountain High, Valley Low
08. All of You
09. When the Sun Comes Out
10. You Don't Know Me
11. Don't Explain
12. Falling in Love with Love
13. A New Town Is a Blue Town
14. Where Flamingos Fly
15. Anyplace I Hang My Hat Is Home
16. The Things We Did Last Summer
17. Anything Goes
18. Cold, Cold Heart
19. You'd Be so Nice to Come Home To
20. Am I Blue
21. Lilac Wine
22. Born to Be Blue
23. I'm so Lonesome I Could Cry
24. The End of a Love Affair
25. Just You, Just Me
26. Dream of You
27. What's New
28. The Nearness of You
29. Wait Till You See Him
A fine singer with a warm, expressive voice, Helen Merrill's infrequent recordings tend to be quite special with plenty of surprises and chance-taking. She started singing in public in 1944 and was with the Reggie Childs Orchestra during 1946-1947. Merrill, who was married for a period to clarinetist Aaron Sachs, had opportunities to sit in with some of the top modernists of the time, including Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, and Bud Powell. She was with Earl Hines in 1952 and started recording regularly for EmArcy in 1954. Her collaboration with Clifford Brown was her first classic. She made several notable EmArcy albums during 1954-1958 (including one in 1956 that helped bring Gil Evans out of retirement); all have been reissued in a large box. After recording for Atco and Metrojazz in 1959, she moved to Italy for the next four years, touring often in Europe and Japan. Back in the U.S., Merrill teamed with pianist/arranger Dick Katz for a pair of notable and unpredictable Milestone dates (1967-1968) and then moved to Japan where she was quite popular. Helen Merrill returned to the United States in the mid-'70s and has since recorded for Inner City, Owl, EmArcy (including a reunion date with Gil Evans) Antilles, and Verve, which released her 2000 album Jelena Ana Milcetic a.k.a. Helen Merrill.