Ruby Murray - Essential Classics, Vol. 328: Ruby Murray (2024)
Artist: Ruby Murray
Title: Essential Classics, Vol. 328: Ruby Murray
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Essential Classics
Genre: Pop, Vocal Jazz
Quality: Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 49:56
Total Size: 175 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Essential Classics, Vol. 328: Ruby Murray
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Essential Classics
Genre: Pop, Vocal Jazz
Quality: Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 49:56
Total Size: 175 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Softly, Softly (2:28)
2. Heartbeat (2:08)
3. I'll Come when You Call (2:34)
4. Real Love (2:09)
5. Evermore (2:26)
6. You are My First Love (2:22)
7. Danny Boy (2:09)
8. Knock on Any Door (2:02)
9. Let Me Go Lover (2:34)
10. Mr Wonderful (2:51)
1. Dear Old Donegal (2:24)
2. Mountains of Mourne (2:35)
3. Goodbye, Jimmy, Goodbye (2:49)
4. Galway Bay (3:11)
5. How Can You Buy Killarnery? (2:17)
6. Phil the Fluter's Ball (2:29)
7. Happy Days and Lonely Nights (2:42)
8. I'll Remember Today (2:27)
9. If Anyone finds this I Love You (3:01)
10. Forever (2:10)
*29 March 1935 in Belfast, Northern Ireland
†17 December 1996 in Torquay, England, UK
Ruby Murray was a popular singer born in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Her characteristic hoarse voice was a result of an operation on her throat in early childhood. She toured as a child singer, and first appeared on television at the age of 12.
Her first single was Heartbeat, which reached the UK top 5 in 1954. The next, Softly, Softly, reached number 1 in 1955, a year in which Murray achieved the rare feat of having five singles in the top twenty at the same time. She married Bernie Burgess and moved to England in 1957. Her second husband was Ray Lamar.
A play by Marie Jones about Murray's life, Ruby, opened at the Group Theatre in Belfast in April 2000.
Her name lives on in Cockney rhyming slang as the rhyme for curry.
†17 December 1996 in Torquay, England, UK
Ruby Murray was a popular singer born in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Her characteristic hoarse voice was a result of an operation on her throat in early childhood. She toured as a child singer, and first appeared on television at the age of 12.
Her first single was Heartbeat, which reached the UK top 5 in 1954. The next, Softly, Softly, reached number 1 in 1955, a year in which Murray achieved the rare feat of having five singles in the top twenty at the same time. She married Bernie Burgess and moved to England in 1957. Her second husband was Ray Lamar.
A play by Marie Jones about Murray's life, Ruby, opened at the Group Theatre in Belfast in April 2000.
Her name lives on in Cockney rhyming slang as the rhyme for curry.