Downhearted Blues - Mildred Bailey, Austin, Lovie [1]
A Porter's Love Song to a Chambermaid - Mildred Bailey, Johnson, James [01]
Picture Me Without You - Mildred Bailey, Koehler, Ted
Now That Summer Is Gone - Mildred Bailey, Simons, Seymour
For Sentimental Reasons - Mildred Bailey, Heyman
It's Love I'm After - Mildred Bailey, Mitchell, Sidney
'Long About Midnight - Mildred Bailey, Hill, Alex [1]
Track Listings (25) - Disc #2
More Than You Know - Mildred Bailey, Eliscu
A Thousand Dreams of You - Mildred Bailey, Alter, Louis
Smoke Dreams - Mildred Bailey, Brown, Nacio Herb
Slumming on Park Avenue - Mildred Bailey, Berlin, Irving
I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm - Mildred Bailey, Berlin, Irving
My Last Affair - Mildred Bailey, Johnson, Haven
Trust in Me - Mildred Bailey, Ager, Milton
Where Are You? - Mildred Bailey, Adamson
You're Laughing at Me - Mildred Bailey, Berlin
Never in a Million Years - Mildred Bailey, Gordon
There's a Lull in My Life - Mildred Bailey, Gordon, Mack
Rockin' Chair - Mildred Bailey, Carmichael
If You Should Ever Leave - Mildred Bailey, Cahn
The Moon Got in My Eyes - Mildred Bailey, Burke
Heaven Help This Heart of Mine - Mildred Bailey, Powell
It's the Natural Thing to Do - Mildred Bailey, Burke, Johnny [Lyri
Posin' - Mildred Bailey, Cahn, Sammy
Bob White (Whatcha Gonna Swing Tonight?) - Mildred Bailey, Hanighen
I See Your Face Before Me - Mildred Bailey, Dietz, Howard
Thanks for the Memory - Mildred Bailey, Rainger, Ralph
Lover, Come Back to Me - Mildred Bailey, Hammerstein, Oscar
Always and Always - Mildred Bailey, Forrest, George
I Was Doing All Right - Mildred Bailey, Gershwin, George
It's Wonderful - Mildred Bailey, Parish, Mitchell
Love Is Here to Stay - Mildred Bailey, Gershwin, George
Track Listings (25) - Disc #3
The Weekend of a Private Secretary - Mildred Bailey, Hanighen, Bernie
Please Be Kind - Mildred Bailey, Cahn, Sammy
Bewildered - Mildred Bailey, Powell
I Can't Face the Music - Mildred Bailey, Bloom
Don't Be That Way - Mildred Bailey, Goodman, Benny
At Your Beck and Call - Mildred Bailey, DeLange, Eddie
Says My Heart - Mildred Bailey, Lane, Burton
I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart - Mildred Bailey, Ellington, Duke
Rock It for Me - Mildred Bailey, Werner, Kay
If You Were in My Place - Mildred Bailey, Ellington
(I've Been) Saving Myself for You - Mildred Bailey, Cahn, Sammy
You Leave Me Breathless - Mildred Bailey, Freed, Ralph
Washboard Blues - Mildred Bailey, Callahan, Fred B.
My Melancholy Baby - Mildred Bailey, Burnett, Ernie
So Help Me - Mildred Bailey, De Lange
Small Fry - Mildred Bailey, Carmichael, Hoagy
As Long as You Live (You'll Be Dead If You Die) - Mildred Bailey, Hanighen
Put Your Heart in a Song - Mildred Bailey, Churchill, Frank
The Sunny Side of Things - Mildred Bailey, Churchill, Frank
Garden of the Moon - Mildred Bailey, Dubin, Al
Love Is Where You Find It - Mildred Bailey, Dubin
I Used to Be Color Blind - Mildred Bailey, Berlin, Irving
This Is Madness (To Love Like This) - Mildred Bailey, DeLange, Eddie
My Reverie - Mildred Bailey, Dubin
What Have You Got That Gets Me? - Mildred Bailey, Rainger
Track Listings (25) - Disc #4
Have You Forgotten So Soon? - Mildred Bailey, Coslow
They Say - Mildred Bailey, Heyman, Edward
Blame It on My Last Affair - Mildred Bailey, Mills
St. Louis Blues - Mildred Bailey, Handy, W.C.
Begin the Beguine - Mildred Bailey, Porter, Cole
Cuckoo in the Clock - Mildred Bailey, Donaldson, Walter
There'll Never Be Another You - Mildred Bailey, Jacobs, Al
'Taint What You Do - Mildred Bailey, Oliver
There'll Be Some Changes Made - Mildred Bailey, Higgins, Billy [2]
Gulf Coast Blues - Mildred Bailey, Williams, Clarence
Prisoner of Love - Mildred Bailey, Derose
The Lamp Is Low - Mildred Bailey, Derose
Moon Love - Mildred Bailey, David, Mack
Ghost of a Chance - Mildred Bailey, Crosby
You're the Moment in My Life - Mildred Bailey, Crosby
I Thought About You - Mildred Bailey, Mercer, Johnny
Bluebirds in the Moonlight - Mildred Bailey, Rainger, Ralph
Darn That Dream - Mildred Bailey, DeLange, Eddie
Peace, Brother! - Mildred Bailey, DeLange, Eddie
All the Things You Are - Mildred Bailey, Hammerstein, Oscar
Wham (Re-Bop-Boom-Bam) - Mildred Bailey, Durham, Eddie
Give Me Time - Mildred Bailey, Wilder, Alec
Don't Take Your Love From Me - Mildred Bailey, Nemo, Henry
Arthur Murray Taught Me Dancing in a Hurry - Mildred Bailey, Mercer, Johnny
I'll Be Around - Mildred Bailey, Wilder, Alec
Blessed with a light, clear, bell-like voice & a musician's ear, coupled with excellent diction, Mildred Bailey could sing a song with such conviction & warmth that she could make the listener believe in it no ma... more »tter how superficial the actual message. She was the number one white singer of the swing era, and truly was Mrs. Swing. 100 tracks have been shoehorned onto four CDs including all her greatest recordings between 1929 & 1942. Includes 52-page booklet. Standard jewel cases housed in a box. Proper. 2003.« less
Blessed with a light, clear, bell-like voice & a musician's ear, coupled with excellent diction, Mildred Bailey could sing a song with such conviction & warmth that she could make the listener believe in it no matter how superficial the actual message. She was the number one white singer of the swing era, and truly was Mrs. Swing. 100 tracks have been shoehorned onto four CDs including all her greatest recordings between 1929 & 1942. Includes 52-page booklet. Standard jewel cases housed in a box. Proper. 2003.
"All I can say is that I bought this box, listened to it more than any other collection of music I've ever owned, and then started buying all 9 CDs in the Chronological Classics of Mildred Bailey series. Never since I first discovered the recordings of Lee Wiley and Ethel Waters did a voice stun and touch me like hers. Her voice has been described as light and sweet, which it is, but that belies the amazing complexity and emotionally wrenching quality of her best performances (of which there are many). Witness her version of "Rockin' Chair", easily the best version of the song I have ever heard. All I can say is, if you think you enjoy vocal jazz and don't know Mildred, you've got a lot of listening to do.
Buy this set for a cheap introduction to Mildred Bailey, although you may find yourself wanting more as I did.
(Let me also recommend the music of Ethel Waters, Anita O'Day, Connee Boswell, Annette Hanshaw and Lee Wiley, other superlative, jazz singers who are not heard nearly enough today.)"
Mildred is so good YOU REALLY NEED THE BOX SET!
Tony Thomas | SUNNY ISLES BEACH, FL USA | 02/14/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Mildred Bailey was not just the first real Jazz band singer. She was one of the earliest real jazz singers and she continued to have a jazz based strain to her singing throughout her career unlike some singers with her success who might have gone more pop. She was fun. She was fun. She was fun. She jived, she joked, she played.
She is just so good you can't just have dribs and drops and drabs, you need the Box Set. Oh Mildred we miss you soooo bad!
You are going to smile when you hear Mildred and know she is really serious when she is serious. She could bring out the jazz in the most wooden of accompaniest, but usually she had great musicians, white, black or otherwise playing behind her, because Mildred is fun.
In an age before television, Bailey continued to have fans white and Black who did not know she was white. This remains true even recently when I have loaned tapes of Mildred to other African Americans without any liner notes or anything and had them ask why they had never heard of this great Black singer.
However, I do find it distressing that Mildred Bailey seems to be so forgotten. She was the first prominent female band singer in Jazz. She was and is fun to listen to and a great voice. Mildred was actually able to swing and swing hard even with Paul Whiteman. She produced masterpieces using some of the same small groups as Billie Holday for HER Columbia recordings, although Bailey semed to prefer Herschal Evans to Lester Young. Bailey was also pretty out front for the time as a white female singer performing with an all black combo--"Mildred Baily and Her Oxford Browns." Mildred was simply magnificent in the small combos her husband Red Novro organized, She had a sense of humor about her performances and a bit of salaciousness that you won't find in Billie's recordings.
I don't think it was just out of sentimentality, but in tribute to her artistry, that Sinatra and Bing Crosby (who owed his career to Bailey's bringing him in contact with Whiteman)spent thousands of dollars helping her out in the last years of her life when health problems and the end of her career led her to very hard times.
Mildred was a great singer, a great jazz pioneer, and a lot of fun. How does anyone get along without the joy her music has brought to my life. There have been times when my life was worse than it is now when I was depressed and just thinking about one of Mildred's tracks on this CD started to turn my life around!"
GREAT MILDRED BAILEY COMPILATION
A. POLLOCK | PLYMOUTH, DEVON United Kingdom | 08/03/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Mildred Bailey, initially heavily influenced by Bessie Smith and Ethel Waters, chose not to follow either the blues style or the melodic ballad method they each had made their own. In fact, when Mildred recorded her first songs in 1929, she could claim to be the first successful white female jazz vocalist, having taken a similar route as Billie Holiday who she admired. However, their voices were dissimilar, with Mildred's having a high bell-like quality enabled by perfect diction, and the ability to interpret lyrics in a believable way which heightened any song's sentiments. Both she and Billie had careers which were beset with personal problems and resulted in their early deaths - in Mildred's case at age 48. Compared with Billie, Mildred's recording career has received less attention, and this four CD set containing 100 tracks from the initial 1929 recording session follows through the years until 1942. Fortunately, Mildred was usually backed by the very best musicians and she recorded with husband Red Norvo's Orchestra, as well as under her own name when they recorded for different record companies. There were also odd sessions with the Dorsey Brothers and Benny Goodman. Apart from featuring songs of the day which did not become standards, there are those which did like HEAT WAVE, PLEASE BE KIND, and PRISONER OF LOVE. She also had her own popular hits, ROCKIN' CHAIR, LAZY BONES and SMALL FRY for which she is particularly remembered. What is clear is the sheer variety of material Mildred recorded, with all songs stamped with her individual style and effort. This collection, together with its excellent career over-view and discography, is certainly one which should help bring her name back into popularity, ensuring she finds her place as one of the great early vocalists"
Louis Armstrong's sister.
Samuel Chell | Kenosha,, WI United States | 01/19/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Actually, she was Bing Crosby's sister-in-law (though it was Frank Sinatra who, unknown to the public, came to her rescue when she was seriously ill and deeply in debt toward the end of her career). But like Bing, Mildred Bailey was, above all, attracted to a new form of American music--jazz--and its most celebrated and capable exponent, Louis Armstrong. Like Bing, she could sing standards out of the Great American Songbook (she was, in fact, an important contributor to its creation), and she could sing with infectious emotion and a unique "sweetness" that sets her apart from numerous singers who favored a "cooler" sound and more "hip" style of delivery. Nevertheless, there's never a doubt about the authenticity of the emotion, of her close attachment to and understanding of her material, whether folk and blues forms close to much African-American music of the day or the songs of Gershwin, Jerome Kern and Cole Porter. In fact, like Bing Crosby her affinity for jazz enabled her to "personalize" the great songs of Broadway musicals, singing them in a more "natural," colloquial, believable style that would ensure their continuing importance beyond the stage or film musicals in which they originally appeared.
For many years, Mildred Bailey was merely a familiar name to me, but after listening to a number of her recordings, I'm inclined to agree with those who claim that she has been unjustly neglected. In fact, it may be no exaggeration to say that she deserves mention in the same breath with Billie Holiday. Lady Day is often credited as the first female vocalist to "personalize" the songs of Arlen, Rodgers, Gershwin, Ellington, etc., leading to their status as "standards." But she had help, and chief among her contemporaries was Mildred Bailey. What she lacked in glamour (her physical attractiveness and weight were always a sore point with her), she made up for in ebullient, high-spirited, high-energy performances (even as she came to be known as the "Rocking Chair Lady," after one of her hit records). It's that energy and relish that leads me to compare her with Louis more than her contemporaries among female vocalists. But she could also tug at heart strings with a quiet, meditative ballad--perhaps not communicating some of the pain of Lady Day's moving ballads but making you feel the hurt all the same.
Listener's responses to her singing are bound to vary (I know listeners these days who simply don't "get" Billie Holiday), but I'd have to disagree with some reviewers who find the material in this copious collection (a hundred songs) to be lightweight and inferior. 80% of the songs are familiar classic fare ("More Than You Know," "All the Things You Are," etc.)-and a few of the novelty numbers have an impressive pedigree, coming from Cole Porter and equally respected giants. You'll find no "Doggie in the Window" or "Fishies Who Swam Over the Dam" here. A number of the "standards"--"Honeysuckle Rose," "Someday Sweetheart"--may at first seem unfamiliar only because of Mildred's reinventing of the melodies (or, in the case of the latter song, making the verse integral with the chorus). She will deliberately limit the range of numerous songs not because of any vocal limitation but to attain a firmer grasp of its rhythmic character, ensuring that the result is no less swinging than the "hottest" instrumentalist on the date. A number of the so-called "novelty tunes" are supremely delightful only because of the interpreter (catch the trumpet-like little shake along with the sweetness in her voice). "I'm Going to Give that Junkman a broken heart, along with a loaded 32" for example, is simply singular, even were it a standard, because of the way Mildred makes humor out of the homicidal (and arguably a better blues than Billie's "Fine and Mellow"). "I'd Love to Take Orders from You" and "I Would Rather Listen to Your Eyes"--period music, perhaps, but try to imagine anyone but Mildred make them work--she's anything but obsequious. Rather, she's seductive, eliciting inspired responses from the musicians who follow with swinging solos established by the initial siren-song statement.
Then there are those "problematic" songs that are right out of the "race record" tradition and "minstrelsy," beginning with "What Kind of Man Is You?" Today, performers such as Crosby, Jolson, and Bailey have, on occasion, provoked instant condemnation for calling to mind "trigger words" connoting racial superiority or inferiority. One of Crosby's biggest hits and best performances, "Shine," has suddenly become forbidden territory--due to ignorance as much as informed understanding of the circumstances of the music and its context. What's important to remember is that for performers like Bing Crosby and Mildred Bailey, there was no "distance" between them and the music that excited them most. The identification between the performer and the material was complete, sincere, and in one sense color-blind. They knew the roots of the music (perhaps more consciously than Elvis, when he first sang blues in the 1950s), but to their mind it was a vibrant and vital, original and new music that, every bit as much as the music of the European music hall or operetta stage, deserved to be heard--and by the widest possible audience in the country of its birth."
The Mildred Bailey Jackpot !!!
Matthew G. Sherwin | last seen screaming at Amazon customer service | 01/09/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Mildred Bailey sang beautifully--and when they say her voice was as clear as a bell, they mean it! This terrific four CD set gives us many tracks from the years when Mildred was truly a star.
The first of the four CDs is entitled Squeeze Me. "Heat Wave" features Mildred's vocals squarely in the spotlight; there's some surface noise but she sings this so well you can forgive it. After a musical intro Mildred comes in--and man, how this number takes flight! I love the jazzy arrangement, too. Mildred's excellent diction bolsters her performance even further. In addition, "I'd Love To Take Orders From You" is a peppy little jazzy tune that features Mildred singing about the type of romance she wants with her man. Mildred sings this campy number without a flaw and this impresses me very much. Listen also for "Honeysuckle Rose;" Mildred sings this without a superfluous note and I like how she sings that opening verse!
The second CD is entitled Rockin' Chair. "I've Got My Love To Keep Me Warm" keeps Mildred's vocals right up front with a great musical arrangement to support her. Mildred sings this flawlessly with panache and sensitivity. "Rockin' Chair" begins with a great horn solo; and Mildred sings this with great feeling. Mildred never misses a note. "Thanks For The Memory" gets the royal treatment from Mildred as she sings this as well as any male crooner ever could. "Our Love Is Here To Stay" again has a beautiful horn solo at the beginning and the somewhat jazzy interpretation lets Mildred put her own stamp on this very famous number. "Our Love Is Here To Stay" makes great use of the percussion, too.
The next CD, Born To Swing, continues the hits. "The Weekend Of A Private Secretary" gets a lovely Latin arrangement to make this number shine. Mildred never sounded better! "My Melancholy Baby" is another highlight of this album; the arrangement for the piano is very well done and Mildred performs "My Melancholy Baby" like the pro that she always was! Listen also for "Love Is Where You Find It;" this number starts with the brass and Mildred comes in to deliver this to perfection. I predict that you will like "Love Is Where You Find It" very much.
The last CD is "There'll Never Be Another You." "St. Louis Blues" sounds so good when Mildred sings it; she never misses a beat and her voice conveys every emotion of every word in the lyrics. "Begin The Beguine" shines like gold when Mildred sings this jazzy number so well; and listen for "Arthur Murray Taught Me Dancing In A Hurry." Mildred sings this cute little number very well.
The four CD set comes with a huge booklet. We get excellent, informative essays about each of the four CDs; and I really like the photos that they use, too.
Mildred Bailey deserves to be remembered more than she is remembered. Hopefully people will notice this great box set of her work and buy it to experience her singularly beautiful style of singing.