Description
Release Date: 2017
Label: Not Now Music
Track List
DISC 1:
1. Ain’t Misbehavin’
2. Blueberry Hill
3. Cheek To Cheek (with Ella Fitzgerald)
4. Georgia On My Mind
5. I’m In The Mood For Love
6. Oops! (with Ella Fitzgerald)
7. Let’s Do It (Let’s Fall In Love)
8. Sweet Lorraine
9. I Get A Kick Out Of You
10. When It’s Sleepy Time Down South
11. Moon Song
12. You’re The Top
13. This Train
14. Gone Fishin’ (with Bing Crosby)
15. Have You Met Miss Jones?
16. St. James Infirmary
17. Nobody Knows The Trouble I’ve Seen
18. Mood Indigo
19. They Can’t Take That Away From Me (with Ella Fitzgerald)
20. Hello Dolly (Live)
DISC 2:
1. Mack The Knife
2. C’est Si Bon
3. When You’re Smiling (The Whole World Smiles With You)
4. A Fine Romance (with Ella Fitzgerald)
5. Just One Of Those Things
6. You Rascal You (with Louis Jordan)
7. Lazy Bones
8. Jeepers Creepers
9. Do Nothin Till You Hear From Me
10. I Only Have Eyes For You
11. Makin’ Whoopee (with Ella Fitzgerald)
12. Cotton Tail (with Duke Ellington)
13. It Ain’t Necessarily So (with Ella Fitzgerald)
14. Willow Weep For Me (with Oscar Peterson)
15. Down By The Riverside
16. Let’s Call The Whole Thing Off (with Ella Fitzgerald)
17. Stompin’ At The Savoy (live with Barrett Deems)
18. La Vie En Rose
19. Body And Soul
20. Summertime (with Ella Fitzgerald)
DISC 3:
1. Cabaret (Live)
2. Dream A Little Dream Of Me (with Ella Fitzgerald)
3. It Don’t Mean A Thing
4. When The Saints Go Marching In
5. You Go To My Head
6. Stormy Weather
7. Tenderly (with Ella Fitzgerald)
8. That Old Feeling
9. Basin Street Blues
10. Let’s Fall In Love
11. Gee Baby, Ain’t I Good To You (with Ella Fitzgerald)
12. Don’t Get Around Much Anymore
13. Little Girl Blue
14. Lazy River
15. Honeysuckle Rose (with Velma Middleton)
16. Drop Me Off In Harlem (with Duke Ellington)
17. I Got Plenty O’ Nuttin’ (with Ella Fitzgerald)
18. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
19. Old Rockin’ Chair (live with Johnny Williams)
20. Top Hat, White Tie And Tails
Notes
The world’s most famous and most influential trumpet player shaped the face of jazz. Then, after inventing the art of scat singing, he moved on to become one of the greatest all-round entertainers – a singer and musician like no other, one who appeared in countless films and made an array of great recordings spanning jazz, Broadway and pure pop. Even today, many years after his death in 1971, the sound of the so-musical gravel that was Louis Armstrong’s voice still resonates throughout our lives.