Jo Stafford - G.I. Jo - Songs of World War II
Facts
| Artist(s) | Jo Stafford |
| Studio | Corinthian |
| Release Date | September 11, 1993 |
| UPC Code | 783121110529 |
| Buy this item | $17.99 at Amazon.com As of Jan 4 3:48 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- I'll Walk Alone - Jo Stafford, Cahn, Sammy
- I Left My Heart at the Stage Door Canteen - Jo Stafford, Berlin, Irving
- No Love, No Nothin' - Jo Stafford, Robin, Leo
- We Mustn't Say Goodbye - Jo Stafford, Dubin, Al
- You'll Never Know - Jo Stafford, Gordon, Mack
- I'll Remember April - Jo Stafford, Raye, Don
- It Could Happen to You - Jo Stafford, Burke, Johnny
- I Don't Want to Walk Without You - Jo Stafford, Loesser, Frank
- I Fall in Love Too Easily - Jo Stafford, Cahn, Sammy
- I'll Be Seeing You - Jo Stafford, Kahal, Irving
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Jo Stafford: A American Voice |
| Terrific As Usual |
| A Special Voice |
I first heard Jo Stafford on a Pasadena radio show featuring recordings from the Big Band Era and the music of the 50s in 1990. I was immediately taken aback; and her voice hit home with me. Her unique extended phrasing and the lovely lilt in her voice was perfectly expressed with backing arrangements that accompanied her voice beautifully, and which was basically the standard, on this, the G. I. Jo CD.
Before her singing career was launched, she received training to become an opera singer, but apparently it didn't work out quite the way she might have planned. But it is fortunate for us as listeners to hear that vocal training come to fruition on these popular songs of that era. These tracks are quality gems because the sound can never be repeated. February 17, 2007
| Class Act |
Two tracks from the original LP are missing (Yesterdays and I Should Care), and the remaining tracks are not in the same order as they originally were. As in my review of June Christy's Something Cool, I have to disagree with recording labels that tinker with albums (for whatever reason? ), particularly the very special "concept albums" from the '50s, like this one, which were not intended to be a collection of potential "hits" with arbitrary ordering. On the original LP, the first track, "I Don't Want to Walk Without You," led effortlessly into the second track, "It Could Happen to You," by a common tone -- the last orchestral pitch of the first song turns into the new key of the second song, a characteristic Weston technique.
Regardless of packaging annoyances, this is a loving Memorial Day tribute for our war veterans. May 30, 2000
| Surprisingly Good |
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