ÍøÆغÚÁÏ

Ruth Etting

Early Jazz Vocals (Encore 6) [Recorded 1932-1937]

Ruth Etting

18 SONGS • 51 MINUTES • MAR 14 2015

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
It Was Beautiful (Recorded 1932)
02:41
2
That's Something to Be Thankful For (Recorded 1932)
E
03:10
3
That's What Heaven Means to Me (Recorded 1932)
02:42
4
The Night When Love Was Born (Recorded 1932)
03:20
5
When We're Alone (Recorded 1932)
03:11
6
Holding My Honey's Hand (Recorded 1932)
03:05
7
Dancing in the Moonlight (Recorded 1933)
02:57
8
Hey Young Fella (Recorded 1933)
02:49
9
Hold Me (Recorded 1933)
02:34
10
Linger a Little Longer in the Twilight (Recorded 1933)
03:00
11
A Needle in the Haystack (Recorded 1934)
02:53
12
Stay as Sweet as You Are (Recorded 1934)
02:45
13
It's Been so Long (Recorded 1935)
02:19
14
Life Is a Song (Recorded 1935)
03:01
15
May I Have the Next Romance with You (Recorded 1935)
02:47
16
It's a Sin to Tell a Lie (Recorded 1936)
02:42
17
It's Swell of You (Recorded 1936)
02:59
18
A Message for the Man in the Moon (Recorded 1937)
03:03
℗© 2015 Vintage Recordings

Artist bios

One of the most popular singers of the late-'20s/early-'30s period, Ruth Etting was not really a jazz singer (unlike her contemporary, Annette Hanshaw) but a superior middle-of-the-road pop singer who was often accompanied by top jazz musicians. She recorded over 200 songs between 1926-1937, appeared on-stage, was in 35 film shorts and three full-length movies, and was a fixture on radio before her bad marriage cut short her career. She made a minor comeback in the late '40s and was still singing on an occasional basis in the mid-'50s when a semi-fictional Hollywood movie on her life (Love Me or Leave Me) was released. A superb torch singer with a cry in her voice even when she smiled, Etting recorded the definitive versions of "Ten Cents a Dance" and "Love Me or Leave Me." ~ Scott Yanow

Read more
Customer reviews
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

How are ratings calculated?