Monday, November 25, 2013

Nellie Lutcher - Two Sides Of Nellie Lutcher

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 52:41
Size: 120.6 MB
Styles: R&B, Vocal
Year: 1995/2010
Art: Front

[2:57] 1. He's A Real Gone Guy
[2:54] 2. Fine Brown Frame
[2:24] 3. Hurry On Down
[2:49] 4. Come And Get It, Honey
[3:15] 5. Let Me Love You Tonight
[3:04] 6. The Lady's In Love With You
[3:13] 7. My Little Boy
[2:29] 8. Alexander's Ragtime Band
[2:43] 9. Cool Water
[2:25] 10. That's A Plenty
[3:10] 11. (All Of A Sudden) My Heart Sings
[2:41] 12. Have You Ever Been Lonely (Have You Ever Been Blue)
[2:42] 13. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
[2:30] 14. You Made Me Love You
[1:44] 15. This Can't Be Love
[2:37] 16. Someone To Watch Over Me
[2:30] 17. Blue Skies
[2:25] 18. Three Little Words
[2:01] 19. It Had To Be You
[1:58] 20. Ole Buttermilk Sky

Nellie Lutcher was born in Lake Charles, Louisiana. As a teenager she learned piano and played in local bands along with her father who played bass. Soon she developed her vocal style as a member of the Southern Rhythm Boys. In 1947 she moved to Los Angeles and entered a local talent show there, and caught the ear of a representative of Capitol Records. She auditioned for the label and they liked what they heard and soon she was offered a recording contract and into the studio she went. Her first outing was Capitol #40002 - "Hurry On Down" and "The Lady's In Love With You". "Hurry" was an immediate hit being constantly played on area radio stations and was was a hard tune to corner, as it was a favorite in the jazz, R & B, and pop music fields. Nellie enjoyed huge success with her first record and it seemed to be a reward for all the years of hard work and scuffling that she had known. Now in her thirties with children of her own, Nellie Lutcher had arrived at last.The second session for Capitol Records resulted in #40017 - "He's A Real Gone Guy" and "Let Me Love You Tonight". Lightening indeed did strike twice as "Guy" was a huge hit just as the first Capitol release had been.

Besides both being hits on R & B stations, her first two records cracked the national pop charts top twenty best sellers. Her next outing for Capitol was her version of the pop standard "My Mother's Eyes" backed with a more contemporary tune "Watch Yourself Bub". In less than a year Nellie Lutcher had catapulted herself into the rarefied atmosphere of a successful crossover artist who had wide appeal to all segments of the listening public. Her stylistic piano playing based on jazz phrasings and boogie woogie and blues figures, coupled with her personalized vocal abilities combining elements of jazz scatting, syllable bending, and snappy asides, was her signature sound and made her a unique performer in the late forties.

Nellie Lutcher remains in our memory as one of the founders of the sound of America, as it has been for the last fifty years. She was there at the beginning and although fame and recognition is not as widespread as it should be, there are enough of us around today that KNOW Nellie Lutcher-our real gone gal.

Two Sides Of Nellie Lutcher

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