Lena Horne - At The Waldorf Astoria (Live) (1958/2019)
Artist: Lena Horne
Title: At The Waldorf Astoria (Live)
Year Of Release: 1958/2019
Label: RCA/Legacy
Genre: Pop, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:38:22
Total Size: 91 mb | 229 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: At The Waldorf Astoria (Live)
Year Of Release: 1958/2019
Label: RCA/Legacy
Genre: Pop, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:38:22
Total Size: 91 mb | 229 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Today I Love Everybody (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
02. Let Me Love You (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
03. Come Runnin' (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
04. Cole Porter Medley: How's Your Romance? / After You / Love of My Life / It's All Right with Me (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
05. Medley: Mood Indigo / I'm Beginning to See the Light (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
06. How You Say It (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
07. Honeysuckle Rose (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
08. Day In-Day Out (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
09. New Fangled Tango (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
10. I Love to Love (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
11. From This Moment On (Live at The Waldorf Astoria)
More than anything else, Lena Horne was a nightclub entertainer, and having completed her film commitments to MGM in 1956, she was free to turn her attention to performing full-time. Starting on New Year's Eve, she spent eight weeks at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York, and at the end of the run RCA Victor Records brought in recording equipment. The result is an excellent representation of Horne in her natural environment. Backed by Nat Brandwynne's Orchestra as conducted by her husband, Lennie Hayton, Horne essays a series of vintage standards that go back to 1929's "Honeysuckle Rose," which she sang in the 1943 film Thousands Cheer. There is a Cole Porter medley ("the always-surprising Cole Porter tunes," she calls them) that includes a triumphant "It's All Right With Me," and the set concludes with "From This Moment On," showing Horne to be the perfect interpreter of Porter's sophisticated songs. And there is a shorter Duke Ellington medley consisting of "Mood Indigo" and "I'm Beginning to See the Light" that is equally impressive. Among the more contemporary tracks, Horne borrows "Let Me Love You" from Mabel Mercer, who introduced it; "Today I Love Everybody" from Betty Grable, who sang it in the 1953 film The Farmer Takes a Wife; and "A New Fangled Tango" from Ethel Merman, who performed it in the 1956 musical Happy Hunting. These are good choices given sympathetic arrangements, and Horne performs them with just the right tone of romance and sly humor. Lena Horne may have left Hollywood behind her by early 1957, but this live album, which charted in the Top Ten, demonstrated that in doing so she had only returned to her greatest strength as a performer.