Billie Holiday - Billie Holiday Essentials : The Greatest Songs of the Jazz Diva (2024)

  • 28 Jun, 12:24
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Billie Holiday Essentials : The Greatest Songs of the Jazz Diva
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Wagram Music
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 6:00:13
Total Size: 1.49 GB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. I'll Be Seeing You (03:29)
2. Strange Fruit (03:12)
3. Solitude (03:08)
4. All of Me (02:59)
5. How Deep Is the Ocean (02:57)
6. Easy Livin' (03:10)
7. April in Paris (03:01)
8. Isn't This a Lovely Day? (04:11)
9. Crazy He Calls Me (03:02)
10. Blue Moon (03:27)
11. As Time Goes by (03:10)
12. Autumn in New York (03:40)
13. Lady Sings the Blues (03:43)
14. Good Morning Heartache (03:28)
15. Love Me or Leave Me (03:17)
16. Willow Weep for Me (03:05)
17. I'm a Fool to Want You (03:22)
18. My Man (02:55)
19. What a Little Moonlight Can Do (02:56)
20. I Cried for You (02:26)
21. Yesterdays (02:47)
22. God Bless the Child (03:08)
23. Comes Love (03:58)
24. Gloomy Sunday (03:09)
25. Tell Me More (03:06)
26. Time on My Hands (03:02)
27. I Hear Music (02:39)
28. Let's Do It (02:54)
29. The Blues Are Brewin' (03:00)
30. Swing Brother Swing (02:54)
31. I Got the Right to Sing the Blues (02:45)
32. Now or Never (03:14)
33. That Old Devil Called Love (02:52)
34. Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone (04:22)
35. Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me (04:12)
36. I Didn't Know What Time It Was (05:58)
37. Them There Eyes (02:48)
38. He's Funny That Way (03:07)
39. I Hadn't Anyone Till You (04:01)
40. Stars Fell on Alabama (04:26)
41. Trav'lin' Light (03:07)
42. Day in, Day out (06:46)
43. Everything I Have Is Yours (03:44)
44. Moonlight in Vermont (03:46)
45. I'll Never Fail You (with Teddy Wilson & His Orchestra) (02:57)
46. Cheek to Cheek (03:33)
47. I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm (02:54)
48. Say It Isn't So (03:15)
49. Don't Explain (03:20)
50. Billie's Blues (03:07)
51. Fine and Mellow (03:16)
52. Some Other Spring (03:35)
53. I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance With You (04:25)
54. Stormy Weather (03:41)
55. Ill Wind (06:13)
56. One for My Baby (And One More for the Road) (05:36)
57. If the Moon Turns Green (02:44)
58. Lover Come Back to Me (03:18)
59. What's New (04:15)
60. These Foolish Things (03:33)
61. It Had to Be You (04:00)
62. I Cover the Waterfront (03:29)
63. But Not for Me (03:47)
64. Embraceable You (03:14)
65. Let's Call the Whole Thing Off (03:21)
66. Love Is Here to Stay (03:40)
67. Nice Work If You Can Get It (03:48)
68. No Good Man (03:05)
69. We'll Be Together Again (04:23)
70. I Must Have That Man! (with Teddy Wilson & His Orchestra) (02:54)
71. My Sweet Hunk of Trash (03:18)
72. Sophisticated Lady (04:47)
73. Body and Soul (06:18)
74. Everything Happens to Me (06:20)
75. Moonglow (02:58)
76. Lover Man (03:20)
77. You Go to My Head (02:51)
78. Easy to Love (02:59)
79. Just One of Those Things (05:28)
80. I Get a Kick Out of You (05:39)
81. Baby Won't You Please Come Home (03:02)
82. No More (02:46)
83. Love for Sale (02:55)
84. Night & Day (02:59)
85. East of the Sun (West of the Moon) (02:54)
86. Gee, Baby, Ain't I Good to You (05:34)
87. All or Nothing at All (05:38)
88. Gone With the Wind (03:23)
89. I Only Have Eyes for You (02:51)
90. Come Rain or Come Shine (04:21)
91. I Thought About You (02:45)
92. When Your Lover Has Gone (04:55)
93. The Man I Love (03:01)
94. I'll Never Be the Same (with Teddy Wilson & His Orchestra) (03:01)
95. Travelin' All Alone (02:12)
96. Back in Your Own Backyard (02:40)
97. They Can't Take That Away From Me (03:01)
98. Tenderly (03:22)
99. Speak Low (04:25)
100. I Don't Want to Cry Anymore (03:53)

The first popular jazz singer to move audiences with the intense, personal feeling of classic blues, Billie Holiday changed the art of American pop vocals forever. More than a half-century after her death, it's difficult to believe that prior to her emergence, jazz and pop singers were tied to the Tin Pan Alley tradition and rarely personalized their songs; only blues singers like Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey actually gave the impression they had lived through what they were singing. Billie Holiday's highly stylized reading of this blues tradition revolutionized traditional pop, ripping the decades-long tradition of song plugging in two by refusing to compromise her artistry for either the song or the band. She made clear her debts to Bessie Smith and Louis Armstrong (in her autobiography she admitted, "I always wanted Bessie's big sound and Pops' feeling"), but in truth her style was virtually her own, quite a shock in an age of interchangeable crooners and band singers.