Martha Raye - Vocal & Big Band Jazz (2012)

  • 06 Aug, 20:38
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Vocal & Big Band Jazz
Year Of Release: 2012
Label: Stardust
Genre: Jazz / Vocal Jazz
Quality: Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 68:40 min
Total Size: 157 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist
-----------
01. I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good
02. Body And Soul
03. That Old Black Magic
04. (If You Can't Sing It) You'll Have To Swing It
05. The Boy Next Door
06. Wolf Boy
07. Blues In The Night
08. Pig Foot Pete
09. After You've Gone
10. Together
11. Miss Otis Regrets
12. Three Little Sisters
13. Oh The Pity Of It All
14. I Cover The Waterfront
15. Close To Me
16. Ooh, Dr. Kinsey!
17. Ol' Man River
18. My Little Cousin
19. Lotus Land
20. Life's Only Joy
21. Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen
22. Peter, Peter Pumpkin Eater
23. Sweet Lorraine
24. As Long As I Live

Martha Raye (August 27, 1916 – October 19, 1994) was an American comic actress and standards singer who performed in movies, and later on television. She was honored in 1969 with an Academy Award as the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award recipient for her volunteer efforts and services to the troops.

In the early 1930s, Raye was a band vocalist with the Paul Ash and Boris Morros orchestras. She made her first film appearance in 1934 in a band short titled A Nite in the Nite Club. In 1936 she was signed for comic roles by Paramount Pictures, and made her first picture for Paramount. Her first feature film was Rhythm on the Range with crooner Bing Crosby. From 1936 to 1939, she was a featured cast member in 39 episodes of Al Jolson's weekly CBS radio show, "The Lifebuoy Program” aka “Cafe Trocadero.” In addition to comedy, Martha sang both solos and duets with Jolson. Over the next 26 years, she would eventually appear with many of the leading comics of her day, including Joe E. Brown, Bob Hope, W. C. Fields, Abbott and Costello, Charlie Chaplin and Jimmy Durante. She joined the USO soon after the US entered World War II.

She was known for the size of her mouth, which was large in proportion to the rest of her face, thus earning her the nickname The Big Mouth. She later referred to this in a series of commercials for Polident denture cleaner in the 1980s: "So take it from The Big Mouth: new Polident Green gets tough stains clean!" Her large mouth would come to relegate her motion picture work to largely supporting comic parts, and was often made up in such a way that it appeared even larger than it was to begin with. In the Disney cartoon Mother Goose Goes Hollywood, she is caricatured dancing alongside Joe E. Brown, another actor known for having a big mouth. In the Warner Bros. cartoon The Woods Are Full Of Cuckoos (1937), she was caricatured as a jazzy scat-singing donkey named Moutha Bray.


IsraCloud : Download