Dorothy Lamour - Lovelight In The Starlight (2000)

  • 25 Nov, 14:29
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Artist:
Title: Lovelight In The Starlight [JASCD117]
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Jasmine Records
Genre: Vocal Jazz, Pop, Soundtracks
Quality: Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 1:11:19
Total Size: 279 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:
1. Lovelight in the Starlight (from "Her Jungle Love") (2:55)
2. Comes Love (2:19)
3. Too Romantic (from "Road to Singapore") (3:31)
4. Little Lady Make-Believe (3:02)
5. Personality (from "Road to Utopia") (2:18)
6. The Moon and the Willow Tree (from "Road to Singapore") (2:42)
7. Tonight Will Live (from "Tropic Holiday") (3:01)
8. The Moon of Manakoora (from "The Hurricane") (3:01)
9. I Go for That (from "St. Louis Blues") (2:25)
10. That Sentimental Sandwich (from "Man About Town") (3:05)
11. My Heart Keeps Cryin' (3:21)
12. Palms of Paradise (from "Typhoon") (3:16)
13. On a Tropic Night (from "Tropic Holiday") (3:04)
14. Strange Enchantment (from "Man About Town") (3:13)
15. Would You? (from "Road to Utopia") (1:34)
16. Experience (from "Road to Rio") (2:20)
17. I'm Gettin' Sentimental Over You (3:10)
18. Kind'a Lonesome (from "St. Louis Blues") (2:26)
19. I'll Take an Option on You (2:52)
20. Constantly (from "Road to Morocco") (2:43)
21. You're Dangerous (from "Road to Zanzibar") (2:33)
22. I'm All a-Tremble Over You (2:51)
23. True Confession (3:05)
24. Junior (from "St. Louis Blues") (3:12)
25. Perfidia (3:07)

There are two things for which Dorothy Lamour will probably be best remembered. The first is the famous sarong she sported in several of her fifty-two films, and the second the way she kept, or rather tried to keep, order between Bing Crosby and Bob Hope in the 'Road' pictures. She had lots of fun playing one off against the other, demonstrating how adept she could be at holding her own against the scheming pair. Look at any of her pictures now, moving or still, and it becomes easy to see why she was one of an elite class of female stars such as Betty Grable, Jane Russell, Lana Turner and Rita Hayworth who were favourite pin-ups of World War II servicemen. Indeed, Life magazine in 1941 declared her to be the No. 1 pin-up of the U.S. Army.