Skip to main content alibris logo

Manhattan Nights: The Complete Golden Years Studio Sessions ()

by

Write The First Customer Review
Manhattan Nights: The Complete Golden Years Studio Sessions - Lee Wiley
Filter Results
Item Condition
Seller Rating
Other Options
Change Currency
Track Listing
  1. Take It from Me (I'm Taking to You)
  2. Time on My Hands
  3. Got the South in My Soul
  4. You're an Old Smoothie
  5. Leave These Reminders for You
Show All Tracks
  1. Take It from Me (I'm Taking to You)
  2. Time on My Hands
  3. Got the South in My Soul
  4. You're an Old Smoothie
  5. Leave These Reminders for You
  6. A Tree Was a Tree
  7. You've Got Me Crying Again
  8. I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues
  9. Let's Call It a Day
  10. A Hundred Years from Today
  11. Easy Come, Easy Go
  12. Repeal the Blues
  13. Careless Love
  14. Motherless Child]
  15. Hands Across the Table
  16. I'll Follow My Secret Heart
  17. What Is Love?
  18. I've Got You Under My Skin
  19. Sweet and Low Down
  20. Sam and Delilah
  21. My One and Only (What Am I Gonna Do?)
  22. 'S Wonderful
  23. I've Got a Crush on You
  24. Someone to Watch over Me
  25. How Long Has This Been Going On
  26. But Not for Me
  27. Baby's Awake Now
  28. A Little Birdie Told Me So
  29. I've Got Five Dollars
  30. You Took Advantage of Me
  31. A Ship Without a Sail
  32. As Though You Were There
  33. Glad to Be Unhappy
  34. Here in My Arms
  35. Let's Fly Away
  36. Let's Do It (Let's Fall in Love)
  37. Hot-House Rose
  38. Find Me a Primitive Man
  39. Easy to Love
  40. You Do Something to Me
  41. Looking at You
  42. Why Shouldn't I?
  43. Down to Steamboat Tennessee
  44. Sugar
  45. Down With Love
  46. Stormy Weather
  47. Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
  48. I've Got the World on a String
  49. Fun to Be Fooled
  50. You Said It
  51. Let's Fall in Love
  52. Moanin' in the Mornin'
  53. Wherever There's Love
  54. The Man I Love
  55. Someone to Watch over Me
Show Fewer Tracks

Lee Wiley's 20-year romance with the American songbook is one of the great love affairs of popular song, equalled during her time only by Ella Fitzgerald. But while Fitzgerald was blessed with the close attention of Norman Granz and a host of great arrangers, Wiley created the concept of the vocal classicist virtually out of thin air, concentrating on six of the best pop composers of the century during her prime of 1931 to 1951. The Dutch label Definitive certainly earned the right to the name with its release of the four ...

loading