Showing posts with label Monica Lewis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monica Lewis. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Monica Lewis - Sing It To The Marines

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 33:05
Size: 75.8 MB
Styles: Vocal
Year: 1957/1998/2010
Art: Front

[3:07] 1. Blues In The Night
[2:48] 2. Miss You
[2:35] 3. I Get A Kick Out Of You
[3:28] 4. I Cover The Waterfront
[2:19] 5. Undecided
[2:22] 6. Let's Face The Music And Dance
[2:32] 7. Rough Ridin'
[2:24] 8. Nice Work If You Can Get It
[3:01] 9. All Alone
[3:08] 10. The Song Is You
[2:36] 11. All Or Nothing At All
[2:40] 12. I'll Be Seeing You

The cover of this one might make the album one of the campiest records on Verve – but the session's a surprisingly great one, with a straighter vocal approach than you'd guess! Monica's got a really sweet vocal style – a bit sexy, and certainly adult – arranged here with some nice jazzy touches from Frank DeVol, working in backings that are a lot hipper than those we remember him using with other singers from the time. Monica handles herself like a big girl in front of all those Marines – all-woman, but clearly not giving it away to the first man in blue who walks down the street.

Sing It To The Marines

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Monica Lewis - Never Let Me Go

Size: 101,6 MB
Time: 43:24
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2004
Styles: Jazz/Pop Vocals
Art: Front

01. Down Here On The Ground (4:55)
02. Close Enough For Love (4:20)
03. Better To Know (4:01)
04. Hey, Magic Man (3:11)
05. Return To Forever (4:35)
06. Gotta Believe (6:31)
07. The Hungry Years (4:21)
08. Let Mama Know (3:37)
09. The World Of Slow (3:21)
10. Never Let Me Go (4:27)

b. 5 May 1922, Chicago, Illinois, USA. Lewis was born into a musical family, a career in showbusiness was virtually inevitable. Her father, Leon Lewis, was a symphonic composer and pianist, her mother, Jessica, sang with the Chicago Opera Company and became one of the country’s leading vocal coaches. Her sister, Barbara Lewis Golub, became an accomplished concert pianist; while her brother, Marlo Lewis, was the producer of the original Ed Sullivan television show, The Toast Of The Town. Lewis first studied voice with her mother and left college at 17 to begin a career as a vocalist on radio. While still in her teens, she had her own programme, Monica Makes Music, on WMCA in New York. This early radio success led to a prestigious engagement at the Stork Club, and appearances with Benny Goodman’s orchestra. After appearing on radio with Frank Sinatra, Dick Powell, and Morton Gould, Lewis had recording sessions with Signature Records and Decca Records. She had a number of successes, including ‘A Tree In A Meadow’ and ‘Autumn Leaves’.

Alongside her appearances on radio and records, for more than a decade, Lewis provided the voice for the ‘Chiquita Banana’ character in cartoons and commercials. She had appeared on the first of Sullivan’s television shows, in 1948, and then came to the attention of Hollywood. She was signed by MGM where she was groomed as a dramatic actress and the studio’s answer to popular star Lana Turner. Among the movies Lewis made was The Strip (1951), which starred Mickey Rooney as a jazz drummer with the featured band of Louis Armstrong. She continued to play roles in films, and also provided an on and off screen singing voice, including Everything I Have Is Yours (1952), in which she sang the title song and danced with star Gower Champion. She also appeared frequently on television, working with Bob Hope, Milton Berle, and Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, sharing top-billing with the latter pair for a New York club engagement. She also toured with USO shows, appearing in Korea with Danny Kaye.

Although at the height of her popularity, and headlining at leading hotels and clubs in Las Vegas, New York, San Francisco and elsewhere, Lewis, now married to movie executive Jennings Lang, retired. However, the call was too strong for a permanent absence and in the 60s, 70s and 80s she appeared in numerous television shows, including Wagon Train, Peter Gunn, Ironside, Quincy, Falcon Crest and Remington Steele. She also made occasional movie appearances, including Charley Varrick (1973), Airport ’77 (1977) and The Sting II (1983). In the mid- and late 80s, Lewis returned to the recording studio, releasing the highly praised Never Let Me Go. The success of this album resulted in the re-release of her 50s recordings.

A fluent interpreter of standards and the great show tunes, Lewis’ singing voice is clear and true. Her warm sound, allied as it is to a subtle vibrato and underlying power, allows her to bring a distinctive touch to a wide range of material. Her son Mike Lang is a noted studio musician and composer who has played piano with several leading jazz artists. He accompanied Lewis on some of her later recordings, which he also produced. ~AMG

Never Let Me Go

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Monica Lewis - Fools Rush In

Size: 97,6 MB
Time: 32:49
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 195?/2014
Styles: Jazz Vocals
Art: Front

01. But Beautiful (2:41)
02. What'll I Do (3:13)
03. Do It Again (2:25)
04. You'd Better Go Now (2:13)
05. But Not For Me (3:00)
06. Isn't This A Lovely Day (2:25)
07. You Make Me Feel So Young (2:14)
08. Fools Rush In (2:13)
09. Am I Blue (2:23)
10. I'd Do Anything For You (2:44)
11. People Will Say We're In Love (3:50)
12. You Don't Know What Love Is (3:20)

Fools Rush In pairs Monica Lewis with arranger/pianist Jack Kelly for what would prove her most intimate and nuanced LP. Kelly's soft, moody approach perfectly complements the feminine complexity of Lewis' vocals -- while never the most gifted or accomplished singer, there's no denying the kittenish appeal she brings to familiar material like "But Not for Me" and "Am I Blue." Moreover, the songs and sequencing create a unified whole all too rare among albums from the era in question. More than just a slapdash collection of performances, Fools Rush In is a stunning evocation of mood and texture from a singer all too often overlooked in favor of less compelling contemporaries.

I Fools Rush In