Home   >   Music   >   Georgia Gibbs - The Best of Georgia G...

Georgia Gibbs - The Best of Georgia Gibbs: The Mercury Years

Facts

Artist(s)Georgia Gibbs
StudioPolygram Records
Release DateAugust 20, 1996
UPC Code731453287228
 

Tracks

  1. Kiss Of Fire
  2. Tom's Tune
  3. While You Dance, Danced, Danced
  4. Cry
  5. So Madly In Love
  6. My Favorite Song
  7. Seven Lonely Days
  8. For Me, For Me
  9. The Bridge Of Sighs
  10. Home Lovin' Man
  11. I Love Paris
  12. Autumn Leaves
  13. Somebody Bad Stole De Wedding Bell
  14. My Sin
  15. How Did He Look
  16. Wait For Me Darling
  17. It's The Talk Of The Town
  18. Tweedle Dee
  19. Dance With Me Henry
  20. Sweet And Gentle
  21. I Want You To Be My Baby
  22. Goodbye To Rome (Arrivederci Roma)
  23. Kiss Me Another
  24. Happiness Is A Thing Called Joe
  25. Happiness Street

User Reviews

Average user review: 3.5 (6 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteElitist Music Snobs Aside ....Quote
.... the fact is, Georgia Gibbs appealed to enough listeners to have 3 of her singles for Coral, 25 for Mercury, and one each RCA Victor and Roulette sell in the millions and therefore score decently on the Billboard charts, the one true measuring stick to determine a musical artist's commercial popularity. And isn't that what most - if not all - strove to achieve? Hit singles? That's what brought in the money and so that's what the record companies went for - those with commercial appeal. That, of course, won't wash with the elitist snobs, those sycophants who want to be seen to be "in the know" by dumping all over those who achieved a mass following, such as Gibbs, Teresa Brewer, Pat Boone, Barry Manilow, Tony Orlando, Engelbert Humperdinck, Tom Jones, etc. etc.

Yes, Georgia "belted out" many of her tunes, but so what? So did Ethel Merman, recognized today as one of the best Broadway musical performers ever. That was her style, for the most part, and she had a devoted following that carried her well into the early years of the birth of R&R.

Born Fredda Gibbons on August 17, 1920 in Worcester, Mass., she first sang on radio in 1937/38 on The Lucky Strike Show, then later as a band singer with the Hudson-DeLange, Freddie Trumbauer, and Artie Shaw orchestras. Late in the 1940s she joined the Jimmy Durante-Garry Moore radio show, and it was during this period that Moore anointed her as "Her Nibbs, Miss Gibbs."

Her first solo hit single came in the spring of 1950 when her version of If I Knew You Were Comin' I'd've Baked A Cake reached # 5 with the backing of Max Kaminsky's Dixielanders for the Decca subsidiary, Coral Records. A few months later she was back on the charts, this time in a duet with Bob Crosby, whose orchestra backs (his brother Bing and son Gary had a competing disc out on Decca), taking Play A Simple Melody, from the Broadway musical "Watch Your Step," to # 25. In early 1951 she had her third and final hit for Coral when I Still Feel The Same About You, with topped out at # 18 under the bulky billing "Her Nibs" with Georgia Gibbs with Owen Bradley Sextet. None of these hits are here, but all can be found on the equally-excellent CD, The Complete Original Hits Of Georgia Gibbs (more on that release later).

After joining Mercury, and being linked on most of her releases with the Glenn Osser orchestra, she scored her first hit there in June when Tom's Tune rose to # 21, and from there through to 1957 she was never off the charts for very long, racking up 24 more hit singles for Mercury and adding LP and EP sales in the millions.

In this volume you get all but 5 of those hits, the missing ones being: Good Morning Mr. Echo (# 21 in July 1951); 24 Hours A Day (365 A Year) - the flip of Goodbye To Rome (Arrivederci Roma), and a # 74 in December 1955; Rock Right (# 36 in spring 1956); Tra La La (# 24 in December 1956); and Silent Lips (# 68 in March 1957). Three of the five are in the above-mentioned release.

The insert to this volume contains a complete discography of the contents, including label details and chart performances, fourpages of informative background notes written by Joseph F. Laredo, and another nice photo of the beautiful Miss Gibbs.

If you were a fan of Georgia back then you will be delighted with this release and its wonderful sound reproduction, which should be purchased in conjunction with the other volume mentioned to give you as complete a library of her hits as possible. August 31, 2007

rating: 1 QuoteAppreciated too much, not 'underappreciated'Quote
How can a "reviewer" like Scarlotti put down someone else while not reviewing
the CD but just offering a defense for this opportunistic and poor singer?
It would be nice to hear some of her music from the 1930s and 1940s to contrast the horrors on this CD.
She does not have versatility; she just blares out everything at the same loud level. She does not have subtlety. Why then is she "underappreciated?" With a career that lasted so long, why then is she remembered for her pathetic cover versions that turned R&B into white bread? Don't blame LaVern Baker as she didn't yield much influence in the world of music or media. Georgia Gibbs was
really bad. April 9, 2006

rating: 5 QuoteA Great, and Underappreciated ArtistQuote
Georgia Gibbs is one of the greatest (and least appreciated) vocalists from the big band and classic pop eras. Miss Gibbs has been much-maligned over the years by a certain group of ignorant "historians" who have little-to-no understanding of the workings of the record industry (as in the "review" by B.M. Peters below).

1) Up until the post-WWII years, the majority of music sales were for sheet music, not records. Records were viewed to a large extent by the music industry as a means of selling sheet music. In those days it was common for each record label to have a popular song recorded by one of their artists. It was not unusual for record charts from the 1940s to have as many as 5 or 6 hit versions of a single song simultaneously on the charts. Georgia Gibbs, who'd been singing professionally since the 1930s, was a part of this tradition.

2) The practice of "covering" hits (as described above) continued to a lessening degree into the 1970s. In the mid-1950s (which is when the controversy pertaining to Miss Gibbs' recordings occurred), it was still going full-force.

3) Like most recording artists at the time, Miss Gibbs was not in charge of selecting her material. The r&b songs in question were not her choice. She preferred ballads (which, in this writer's opinion, is where marvelous voice is best showcased).

4) The ridiculous attack on Miss Gibbs stems from a public campaign by LaVern Baker to discredit Gibbs (while promoting her own records). Baker's records are slow and draggy, and obviously inferior to Miss Gibbs' versions. These records were covered by many other artists as well (Teresa Brewer had a minor hit with TWEEDLE DEE) -- including several r&b artists, whose arrangements were even closer to Baker's than was Gibbs'.

5) Georgia Gibbs had the hit versions of the songs because she was the better singer.

6) Georgia Gibbs had topped the charts with KISS OF FIRE, long before TWEEDLE DEE came out, and certainly didn't need to ride on LaVern Baker's skirttails -- rather it was the other way around.

7) But to really experience the work of this great vocalist, one should listen to the many beautiful ballads on this album: KISS OF FIRE, WHILE YOU DANCED, DANCED, DANCED, HOW DID HE LOOK, AUTUMN LEAVES, I LOVE PARIS, etc.; as well as he wonderful, country-tinged SEVEN LONELY DAYS and her jazzy, swinging version HOME LOVIN' MAN.

While there is no comprehensive Georgia Gibbs collection, the Mercury Years is one of the best ones out there.

Other truly great G.G. songs include WHAT'LL I DO, I'LL BE SEEING YOU, THE MAN THAT GOT AWAY, HOW ABOUT ME, MELANCHOLY BABY, A LASTING THING, GOT HIM OFF MY HANDS, THE LONESOME ROAD, LET'S DO IT, OL MAN MOSE, THE THINGS WE DID LAST SUMMER, LIKE A SONG, SILENT LIPS, CHERRY PINK AND APPLE BLOSSOM WHITE, BAUBLES BANGLES AND BEADS, COME RAIN OR COME SHINE, IT HAD TO BE YOU, FOOL THAT I AM, I GOT IT BAD and WALKING THE FLOOR OVER YOU. Fortunately, most all are available on various cds by her. August 27, 2005

rating: 1 QuoteInferior vocalist,A leach, An oppotunist Crow.Quote
Georiga Gibbs is opportunist thief.Some of her biggest records were exact, almost note for note covers of versions done by black singers of the 50's.Ruth Brown, LaVern baker, and Etta James were all victims of this woman.She covered their superior versions almost note for note, right after the originals started up the pop charts.Radio dj's were quik to make to room for Georgias versions because (in my opinion) she was white. Georgias versions not only out sold the originals 100 to 1 they in a sense stopped the originals from living up to their full potential as singles.I know many R&B artists could not stand her for this reason.Quite frankly I understand. She is not as good and could never have been as good as these pioneering women. If you want to hear more vibrant,soulful versions of many of the songs she covered look up the original versions by the original artists. ie. Dance with me Henry (aka Roll with me Henry, originally done by Queen of the Blues Etta James in 1955)
and Tweedle Dee (originally done by LaVern Baker in 1955)
They are superior vocally. Even though their versions were buried after Georgias flooded the markets, LaVern, Etta,and Ruth are, were and will always be more repected,revered, and looked up to. Remember there is only one original. The artists Georgia covered were pioneers, they did it from their souls.
Georgia exploited them.
Look up the originals. July 21, 2005

rating: 5 QuoteThe Voice I Fell In Love WithQuote
This is a great album by a wonderful vocalist whose voice has kept me spellbound since I stumbled upon a couple of her old 78s when I was 12 years old. Back in those days (the mid-70s) it was impossible to find anything by her in record stores (I searched record stores in NJ, PA, DE and NY for 20 years without the least bit of luck). Thankfully, CDs have made a lot of previously inaccessible songs readily available.

As far as this album goes -- I love it to pieces. I'd only ever heard a couple of the tracks on it, so this was a brand new experience for me. Georgia Gibbs' voice is amazingly beautiful and thoroughly enthralling. She gets some deep, husky tones in on these that, literally, send shivers up my spine.

I've recently heard the original recordings of the notorious "cover" records (Dance With Me, Henry and Tweedle Dee) and Georgia's versions are by far the superior takes. There's no question as to why Georgia's versions were the ones that became the big hits.

My only regret with this album is that two of my favorite songs from the 78s I owned (also MERCURY) are missing: A Lasting Thing, and Cherry Pink & Apple Blossom White. Here's hoping MERCURY brings out a Part II -- soon. December 28, 2002

More reviews at Amazon.com ...