Billie Holiday The Complete Commodore Recordings Rar Download

Description If you're a completist who insists on having everything that Billie Holiday recorded, The Complete Commodore Recordings is required listening. But for the more casual listener, it's best to pass on that two-CD set and stick with The Commodore Master Takes. While The Complete Commodore Recordings contains all of the alternate takes that Holiday recorded for Commodore in 1939 and 1944, this collection only concerns itself with the master takes (which total 16). Holiday never singed an exclusive contract with Commodore -- she only freelanced for the label, and the ultra-influential jazz singer spent a lot more time recording for Columbia in the 1930s and early 1940s, and for Decca from 1944-1950.

Borland turbo basic download free. But her Commodore output was first-rate, and Lady Day excels whether she's joined by trumpeter Frankie Newton's octet at a 1939 session or by pianist Eddie Heywood's orchestra at three sessions in 1944. All About Jazz is looking for 1,000 backers to help. Billie Holiday Recordings. Help us complete the Billie. Billie Holiday: The Complete Commodore & Decca. Billie Holiday: Billie Holiday: The Complete Commodore & Decca Masters jazz review by George Kanzler, published on June 13, 2010.

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Although many of Billie Holiday's recordings for Commodore and Decca are often overlooked -- at least in comparison to the songs that bookend her career (for Columbia and Verve) -- they include some of her best work, beginning at the end of the '30s with 'Strange Fruit' and stretching to the end of the '40s with 'God Bless the Child.'

Find thousands reviews. The CD gets off to an impressive start with the controversial 'Strange Fruit,' a bone-chilling account of lynching in the Deep South that ended up being released on Commodore because Columbia was afraid to touch it.

Holiday is also quite expressive on performances that range from 'Fine and Mellow,' 'I Got a Right to Sing the Blues' and 'Yesterdays' in 1939 to 'My Old Flame,' 'Billie's Blues,' 'I'll Be Seeing You,' and 'He's Funny That Way' in 1944. For those with even a casual interest in Holiday's legacy, this superb CD is essential listening. 01 - Strange Fruit 02 - Yesterdays 03 - Fine and Mellow 04 - I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues 05 - How Am I to Know 06 - My Old Flame 07 - I'll Get By 08 - I Cover the Waterfront 09 - I'll Be Seeing You 10 - I'm Yours 11 - Embraceable You 12 - As Time Goes By 13 - He's Funny That Way 14 - Lover, Come Back to Me 15 - Billie's Blues 16 - On the Sunny Side of the Street.