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Saturday, February 5, 2022

The Montagu Three Plus One

 

I Love Her

The Montagu Three Plus One
Album Design and Cover Painting: C. H. Barkhaus
Engineer: Mack Emerman
Master Lacquers: Jack Davis
Bahamian Rhythms Limited BRH-53
Criteria Recording Co., Inc. - Miami, Florida
1966

Personnel:

Arranger, Pianist & Leader: Martin Conliffe
Vocalist: Donald Butler
Drummer: Eugene Fitzgerald
Bass: John Gibson

Shame And Scandal
Yellow Bird
Gin And Coconut Water
Island In The Sun
Back To Back
Wings Of A Dove
I Love Nassau
Behold
More
Fools Rush In
I Love Her
The Saints Go Marching In

Country Serenade - Lonesome Valley Singers

 

Jesse James

Country Serenade
Lonesome Valley Singers
Diplomat STEREO DS 2396

Boll Weevil
Paper Of Pins
Froggy Went A Courtin'
Cockles And Mussles
Down In The Valley
Irene Good Night
Jesse James
Shenandoah
Foggy Foggy Dew
Erie Canal
John Henry
Scarlet Ribbons

Friday, February 4, 2022

Groovin' High With Great Sax Stars

 

Muezzin'

Groovin' High With Great Sax Stars
Bill Holman - Art Pepper - Jay Care - Richie Kamuca - Phil Woods - Gabe Baltazar
Cornet Records CXS-196

From the back cover:

Gabe Baltazar - Born in the Hawaiian Islands of Japanese parents, developed a great admiration for American jazz. He hold his own on alto, with the Paul Towaga Quartet.

Pepper Adams - Who originally was a tenor man, became a convert to the over-sized bari on which he gained success with Stan Kenton and Maynard Ferguson.

Jay Care - A Tenor Man who is a veteran of the band wars having worked internationally as a reed section member of some of the best known bands of the past decade

Bill Holman - has gained equal fame for his writing skill. His tenor has been featured with Charlie Barnett, Stan Kenton and Shorty Rogers.

Richie Kamuca - A renowned tenor man who has been in constant demand with such groups as Stan Kenton, Woodie Herman, Maynard Ferguson, Shelly Manne and Shorty Rogers.

Peanuts - Gabe Baltazar
Oriental Blues - Gabe Baltazar
Muezzin' - Pepper Adams
Freddy Froo - Pepper Adams
Jay's Tune - Jay Care
Zig Zag - Bill Holman
Rain Drain - Richie Kamuga
Blues Plus Eight - Phil Woods

Fever! - Doc Severinsen

 

Cleopatra's Asp

Fever! 
Doc Severinsen 
His Trumpet And Orchestra
Cover Photo & Design: George S. Whiteman
Command Quadraphonic CQD 40003
A Product of ABC Records, Inc.
1971

From the inside cover: In this collection, Doc is heard in a fresh and unusually inviting setting. His band is a medium-sized group that is partly geared toward a throughly contemporary sound through the presence of three guitars (Tony Mottola, Al Casamenti and Bucky Pizzarelli) and a remarkably strong and versatile rhythm section (Dick Hyman playing piano and organ, Bob Haggart on bass, either Ed Shaughnessy, Osie Johnson or Bobby Rosengarden on drums and a percussion team that includes at various times Shaughnessy, Phil Krauss and Artie Marotti). But the group also includes a four-man trombone ensemble (Bob Alexander, Wayne Andre, Harry DiVito and Paul Faulise with Lou McGarity sitting in for Andre on three pieces) which provides a rich and sturdy offsetting cushion for the fire and brilliance of Doc Severinsen's trumpet.

With these combination of instruments, it is inevitable that the power and excitement of a big band performance frequently makes itself felt. Yet these are essentially loose, freewheeling small group arrangements in which Doc has the room to explore the color and flavor of a broad range of playing styles.

Dick Hyman's arrangements are chock full of delightful surprises – movements among tempos and keys, twists of phrase that are sometimes breathtaking in their beauty or suddenly and startlingly funny. The unusual sound of a Mediterranean drum, a deliberately mis-tuned guitar, chimes, a banjo, unique unison effects and even more unusual almost-unison effects add color and merriment as they bubble and flare around and through Doc Severinsen's remarkably imaginative trumpet work.

In A Little Spanish Town
On A Clear Day
Cotton Fields
Walk Right In
The Sidewinder
Raggedy Jim
The Lady In Red
Tennessee Waltz
Fever
Ja-Da
He's Got The Whole World In His Hands
Cleopatra's Asp

The Big Sounds Of The Drags - Volume 2

The Big Sounds Of The Drags
Volume 2
The Big Sound Series Volume 5
Written and Produced by Jim Economides
Capitol Records T 2146
1964



 

50 Guitars For Midnight Lovers - Tommy Garrett

Midnight Lovers

50 Guitars For Midnight Lovers
The 50 Guitars Of Tommy Garrett
Guitar Solos by Tommy Tedesco
Arranger: Pete King
Produced by Tommy "Snuff" Garrett
A Snuff Garrett Production
Art Direction: Woody Woodward
Engineer: Roy Durkee
Liberty Records STEREO LSS-14047
1970

From Billboard - October 31, 1970: The unique and delightful 50 guitars, under the direction of Tommy Garrett, offer another top romantic mood package, loaded with programming and sales potential. Blending the old with the new, their Pete King treatments of "Twilight Time," "Close To You" and "Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet" are just a few of the highlights.

Shangri-La
Live For Life
Close To You
Romeo & Juliet
Midnight Lovers
It's All In The Game
Twilight Time
Come Saturday Morning
Armen's Theme
I'll Never Fall In Love 
Again
Yesterday, When I Was Young
Everybody's Talkin'

Moonlight Serenade - Eddie Maynard

 

Rainbow Rhapsody

Moonlight Serenade
The Glenn Miller Sound
Eddie Maynard and His Orchestra
Diplomat STEREO DS 2453

Moonlight Serenade
Juke Box Saturday Night
Story Of A Starry Night
Sting Of Pearls
Anvil Chorus
American Patrol
London Derry Air
Rainbow Rhapsody
Johnny One Note
Concerto



Thursday, February 3, 2022

It's Anita Kerr Country - The Anita Kerr Singers

 

Singing My Song

It's Anita Kerr Country
The Anita Kerr Singers
Produced, Arranged and Conducted by Anita Kerr
Associate Producer: Alex Grob
Recorded at Chappell Recording Studios, London, England
Engineer: John Timperly
Mix-down Engineer: Lee Herschberg
Dot Records STEREODLP 25976
A Division of Famous Music Corporation
1970

Personnel:

Soprano and Solos: Anita Kerr
Alto: Jackie Ward
Tenor: Gene Merlino
Bass: Bob Tebow

Singing My Song
Natural To Be Gone
My Own Peculiar Way
This Sad, Sad Life
Detroit City
Galveston
Darling Jane
She's Still Gone
Johnny Wants To Be A Star
The Last Letter
It Will Come To Pass
Make This World Go Away

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

The Symphonic Ellington - Duke Ellington

 

Night Creature

The Symphonic Ellington
Duke Ellington and His Orchestra
And 500 of Europe's Finest Musicians
Reprise STEREO R9-6097
1964

Personnel:

Conductor and Piano: Duke Ellington
Trumpets: Cat Anderson, Roy Burrowes & Cootie Williams
Cornet and Violins: Ray Nance
Trombones: Lawrence Brown & Buster Cooper
Bass Trombone: Chuck Connors
Alto Saxophone and Clarinet: Russell Procope
Alto Saxophone: Johnny Hodges
Tenor Saxophone: Paul Gonsalves
Tenor Saxophone and Clarinet: Jimmy Hamilton
Baritone Saxophone and Bass Clarinet: Harry Carney
Bass: Ernie Shepard
Drums: Sam Woodyard

Musicians of the Symphony and Opera Orchestras of Paris, Hamburg, Stockholm and La Scala, Milan

From the back cover: Of his many European tours, the most successful ever undertaken  by Duke Ellington began early in 1963 during the worst winter in a hundred years. Foot-stamping queues, packed, enthusiastic houses and newspaper superlatives were the rule, and a crowed itinerary was somehow fulfilled as Duke and his men flew in and out of frozen airfields.

Duke also somehow found time to realize a long-standing ambition: to record those of his extended works which had been orchestrated for performances by his own band and symphony orchestra. The result, this album, contains the fruits of the collaboration between Duke, his fifteen men, and some five hundred of the best talents from the symphonic resources of Paris, Hamburg, Stockholm and Milan.

Night Creature

In 1955 Duke Ellington was commissioned by the eminent composer Don Gillis to write a piece to be played by the Symphony of the Air in concert with the Ellington band. The outcome, "Night Creature," was subsequently performed not only by the Symphony of the Air, but also by the symphonies of Cleveland, Buffalo, Detroit and New Haven, and by the National Symphony in Washington. Duke's own explanation of the work's three movements is characteristically illuminating:

"The first movement is about a blind bug who comes out every night to find that because he is the king of the night creatures, he must dance. The reason he is king, of course, is that being blind he lives in night all day, and when night really falls he sees as well as anyone else, but with the difference that he is accustomed to not seeing. So he puts out his antennae and goes into his dance, and if his antennae warn him of danger, he pauses, turns in another direction, and continues bugging the jitterbugs.

"The second movement is based on that imaginary monster we all fear we shall have to meet some midnight, but when we meet him I'm sure we shall find the he, too, does the boogie boogie.

"Night Creatures, unlike stars, do not come out at night – they come on, each thinking that before the night is out he or she will be the star. They are the restless cool whose exotic or erotic animations, no matter how cool, beg for recognition, mainly from the queen, that dazzling woman who reigns over all night creatures. She is the theme of the third movement, sitting there on her high place and singing, 'I want to be acknowledged' (in D major), or 'Who but me shall be desired?' (in A flat), or 'Who has the taste for my choreography?' (in A minor). After having made each of her subjects feel that Her Majesty sings only for him or her, who is individually the coolest or the craziest, her high-toned highness rises and snaps her fingers. As they stomp off the hand-clapping, everybody scrambles to be in place, wailing and wringing into the most over-indulged form of up-and-outness."

The first and second movement were recorded in Stockholm, the third in Paris. The soloists are Duke Ellington, Paul Gonsalves, Ray Nance (violin), Cootie Williams, Johnny Hodges, Lawrence Brown and Harry Carney (baritone saxophone), Cat Anderson supplying the final up-and-outness.

Non-Violent Integration

In 1949, thrilled at the prospect of performing with the Philadelphia Orchestra in Robin Hood Dell, Duke Ellington wrote what he called a "little thing," which he hoped might interest the great musicians of that magnificent orchestra. They obviously found it interesting, because they played it with a warm enthusiasm which delighted him. His first experience with that particular type of "tonal-hybrid," gave inspiration for the present-day title: "Non-Violent Integration." Recorded in Germany with members of the Hamburg Symphony, the soloists, beside Duke himself, are the first oboe of that organization, Johnny Hodges, Buster Cooper, Jimmy Hamilton, Paul Gonsalves and Cat Anderson.

La Scala, She Too Pretty To Be Blue

Duke Ellington arrived in Milan early on February morning to discover that the musicians of the La Scala Orchestra would be available to him for only two hours at 5 p.m. He had to write something that would not need much rehearsal and would take as little time as possible to record. He picked up his pencil at 10 a.m. and wrote this piece. The soloists are Russell Procope (clarinet), Paul Gonsalves, Lawrence Brown and Cootie Williams.

Harlem

Commissioned to write the work for the NBC Symphony in 1950, during the period when Maestro Arturo Toscanini was conductor, Duke Ellington wrote, "Harlem" on the Lle de France while returning to New York from Europe.

The vivid and inspiring picture of Harlem he had in mind bubbled out of him, he recalls, "tonally and spontaneously." He knew that Harlem had the reputation for being "a great place for swingers, where the inhabitants danced, sang, drank and gambled twenty-six hours a day," but he remembered much else about it, too.

"When you arrive in Harlem," he says, "you discover first that there are more churches than cabarets, and a reputation, with people, some plain and some fancy, some living luxuriously, others not so luxuriously, some urbane, some sub-suburban, laughing, crying, and experiencing a million different kinds of ups and downs. So town to uptown, true and false; (1) Pronunciation of the word 'Harlem,' itemizing its many facets from down-town to uptown, true and false; (2) 110th Street, heading north through the Spanish neighborhood; (3) Intersection further uptown – cats shucking and stiffing; (4) Upbeat parade; (5) Jazz spoken in a thousand languages (6) Floor show; (7) Girls out of step, but kicking like crazy; (8) Fanfare for Sunday; (9) On the way to church; (10) Church – we're even represented in Congress by our man of the church; (11) The sermon; (12) Funeral; (13) Counterpoint of tears; (14) Chic chick; (15) Stopping traffic; (16) After church promenade; (17) Agreement a cappella; (18) Civil Rights demandments; (19) March onward and upward; (20) Summary – contribution coda.

Recorded in Paris, the soloists are Ray Nance (cornet), Jimmy Hamilton (clarinet), Lawrence Brown, Paul Gonsalves, Harry Carney (baritone saxophone and bass clarinet) and Russell Procope (clarinet). – Stanley Dance

From Billboard - January 25, 1964: Four examples of original Ellingtonia as performed by musicians of the Symphony and Opera Orchestras of Paris, Stockholm and La Scala in close association with some of the best side men in the jazz world (Cootie Williams, Paul Gonsalves and others). Although the Duke has taken to the classical-jazz field before, his followers and jazz fans alike will find these four works among his most imaginative.

The Touch Of Your Lips - Nat King Cole

 

Poinciana

The Touch Of Your Lips
Nat King Cole
An Album Of Ballads Tender As A Kiss
Produced by Lee Gillette
Music Arranged and Conducted by Ralph Carmichael
Capitol Records SW 1574
1961

From Billboard - April 3, 1961 - Another soft, lush, tender production of ballads, sung with great warmth by Nat Cole. The arrangements and conducting were handled by Ralph Carmichael, who focused on soft, whispery strings and woodwinds. The accent is on the tasty and the unobtrusive background sound here with such numbers as "The Touch Of You Lips," "Only Forever," and Cole's current single, "Illusion," featured. Spinnable, salable wax.

The Touch Of Your Lips
I Remember You
Illusion
You're Mine, You!
Funny
Poinciana
Sunday, Monday, Or Always
Not So Long Ago
A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
Only Forever
My Need For You
Lights Out

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Country And Western Hits

 

By The Time I Get To Phoenix

Country And Western Hits
Somerset ALBUM SF-31100
An Alshire Production

Honey
Sing Me A Happy Song
We Didn't Cheat On You
End Of My Rope
Save A Kiss For Me
By The Time I Get To Phoenix
When My Conscience Takes Over
Just Another Memory
Who Am I
Only Cheaters Can Win

To You Sweetheart, Aloha - Andy Williams

 

Sweet Leilani

To You Sweetheart, Aloha
Andy Williams
Cadence Records CLP 3029
1959

From Billboard - September 14, 1959: Here's a tasteful, restful package of familiar Hawaiian themes, sung with relaxed showmanship and rich vocal quality by Williams. Selections include the artist's hit single, "Hawaiian Wedding Song," the title theme, "Blue Hawaii," "Sweet Leilani," etc. Sock jockey wax.

To You Sweetheart, Aloha
Blue Hawaii
I'll Weave A Lei Of Stars For You
Sweet Leilani
The Moon Of Manakoora
The Hawaiian Wedding Song
Song Of The Islands
A Song Of Old Hawaii
Love Song Of Kalua
Beyond The Reef
Ka-Lu-A
Aloha Oe

Monday, January 31, 2022

Love And Marriage - The Ray Charles Singers

 

Love Is Here To Stay

Love And Marriage
The Ray Charles Singers
Decca Records DL 8787
1958

From the back cover: About The Ray Charles Singers

Ray Charles, a man of multiple talents, can conceivably be called a "Jack Of All Trades." However, we must amend the remainder of that well-worn expression and say "master of many." As a combination arranger, director, composer and vocalist, he does an admirable job of each. In this album he did, as always, all the arranging and directing, wrote the song To Have And To Hold, and is heard singing solo on Love Is The Sweetest Thing. With a devoted wife and three children cozily entrenched in Great Neck, Long Island, Mr. Charles is himself as good an advertisement for "Love And Marriage" as you'll ever come across.

The Ray Charles Singers have been heard over radio and television with Perry Como since 1947, and as "The Hit Paraders' since 1949. They have also served as supporting artists to most of the top singers in the country. In this album they are heard in three different combinations: a mixed group of twelve (four girls, eight men), a female group of ten, and a male group of nine.

The singers are, in vocal order: Lai Winter, Peggy Powers, Miriam Workman, Rose Marie Jun, Audrey Marsh, Elizabeth Rinker, Joyce DeYoung, Bettye Marshall, Francine Caroll, Lillian Clark, Barbara Nelson, Steve Steck, Jerry Duane, Jim Stover, Bob Sands, Larry Smith, Alan Sokoloff, Gene Steck, Artie Malvin, Art Lambert, Mike Stewart and Mrs. Charles' 'good right hand" Gene Lowell.

From Billboard - October 27, 1958: The Ray Charles chorus makes its bow on Decca and it's one to crow about. Arrangements have never been more interesting and the group does a fine job in making them come to life. Various complements are used – nine men, mixed chorus of four gals and eight men and 10 ladies by themselves, making for good pacing. Dick Hyman adds much to the session with his tasty piano and organ work. All the tunes deal with love and/or marriage. Salable and spinnable.

Love And Marriage
Love Is The Sweetest Thing
I Wanna Get Married
The Girl That I Marry
Love Is A Simple Thing
Let's Fall In Love
Waltz Down The Aisle
Love Is Here To Stay
I Married An Angel
To Have And To Hold

Drummer Man - Gene Krupa

 

Opus 1

Drummer Man
Gene Krupa In HIghest-FI
Featuring Anita O'Day & Roy Eldridge
Cover and Liner Photos by Herman Leonard
Verver Records MGV-2008
1956

Personnel:

Drums: Gene Krupa
Piano: David McKenna
Guitar: Joseph Galbraith
Bass: John Drew
Tenor Saxophone: Sam Marowitz
Baritone Saxophone: Danny Bank
Trumpet: Joseph Ferrante, Bernie Glow, Nicholas Travis & Roy Eldridge
Trombone: J. J. Johnson, Kai Winding, Fred Ohms & James Cleveland

From the back cover: Just why Anita and Roy do so well playing with a Krupa band is not easy to fathom unless it's because they, the three of them, feel especially comfortable working together. Before, when Anita and Roy were members of the Krupa organization they created some of the most memorable music ever. With this returning – it happened in New York in the spring of '56, by the way – the same old spirit, obviously, has remained if not grown ever more rewarding to hear. Krupa, as everyone knows by now, is a veteran of the great old Benny Goodman band and has had his own big band and smaller units since then. No other drummer has been more honored, none more widely known, none more respected. He is, in truth, the nations's perennial "Drummer Man."

Naturally, when Gene, Anita and Roy decided to record again, they wanted to do some of the favorites well known to their fans of the big band days. First off, of course, was "Let Me Off Uptown," a bouncer in which Anita and Roy tell the joys of a not-too-mythical "uptown" and Roy takes a shiningly perfect trumpet solo. "Fish Market" with Roy growls and then expands to higher register. "That's What You Think" shows Anita in a sardonic mood with a largely wordless but meaningful reading. And speaking of meaningless, listen to "Boogie Blues" and Anita asking, plaintively: "Don't the moon look lonesome?" Through all of this, of course, there's the drummer man at work – notably in a peppery percussion tour de force,  "Wire Brush Stomp," and "Boogie Blues" where Gene responds brightly to Anita's query: "Do you hear the drummer boogie?"

From Billboard - June 9, 1956: This is Gene Krupa in hi-fi, featuring many of his Swing Era hits re-recorded with the original stars, Anita O'Day and Roy Eldridge. Like the other modernized "Hi-Fi" packages (Goodman, James, etc.) it should enjoy a mighty healthy spin and sales life. Krupa is back in top form, as is thrush O'Day, and Eldridge rarely has sounded this brilliant. The Krupa specials have been up-dated, mostly by ace arranger Quincy Jones, and are performed by an all-star band that sounds as clean as Krupa's old crew. Titles include "Let Me Off Uptown," Rockin' Chair," "Drum Boogie," "Wire Brush Stomp," etc. Plenty here for jocks and jazznicks.

Let Me Off Uptown - Anita O'Day and Roy Eldridge, vocal; Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo - Arranged by Quincy Jones
Rockin' Chari - Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo; Arranged by Quincy Jones
Opus 1 - Anita O'Day, vocal; Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo - Arranged by Quincy Jones
Fish Market - Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo - Arranged by Manny Albam
Drummin' Man - Ainta O'Day, vocal; Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo - Arranged by Quincy Jones
Boogie Blues - Anita O'Day, vocal; Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo - Arranged by Quincy Jones
Leave Us Leap - Soloists in order of appearance: Roy Eldridge, Trumpet; Eddie She, Tenor Sax; Jimmy Cleveland, Trombone, Dave McKenna, Piano; Aaron Sachs, Tenor Sax - Arranged by Billy Byers
Slow Down - Anita O'Day, vocal; Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo - Arranged by Billy Byres
Wire Brush Stomp - Anita O'Day, vocal, Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo - Arranged by Quincy Jones
That's What You Think - Anita O'Day, vocal; Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo - Arranged by Quincy Jones
After You've Gone - Roy Eldridge, Trumpet Solo, Aaron Sachs, Clarinet Solo - Arranged by Quincy Jones

Viva La Feria - Peter Thomas

 

Let The Sunshine In

Viva La Feria
The Peter Thomas Sound Orchestra
Photo by Bernd Christian Wetzer
Graphics by Jurgen Gesang
Printed in Germany
Polydor 222 008
1969

Mas Que Nada
Eloise
Vou Par De Beber A Dor
Palabras
Cuando Llega Mi Amor
Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da
La Playa
Iliza
Nostalgia
Paola
Viva La Feria
Let The Sunshine In

Matilda - The String-A-Longs

 

Summertime

Matilada
The String-A-Longs
Produced by Noel Ball
Dot Records DLP 3463
1962

My Blue Heaven
Brass Buttons
Are You Lonesome Tonight
Torquay
Summertime
Panic Button
Matilda
Nearly Sunrise
Walk Don't Run
Harbor Lights
Perfidia
Bulldog

Sunday, January 30, 2022

Girl Watchers - Les / Larry Elgart

 

Night Walk

Girl Watchers 
Featuring Music To Watch Girls By
Les / Larry Elgart
*Arranged by Bobby Scott
Produced by Two Macero
Cover: Cato
STEREO CS 9433
1967

Music To Watch Girls By*
Shine On Harvest Moon
That's Life
The Spy With A Cold Nose* (from "The Spy With The Cold Nose)
Night Walk*
Out Of Nowhere
Girl Watchers
Look For The Silver Lining
Girl Talk
Miss You*
Let A Smile Be Your Umbrella* (On A Rainy Day)

One More Time - Wild Bill Davis

 

African Waltz

One More Time
Wild Bill Davis at The Organ
Cover Photo: Decca Photography Studio - Hal Buksbaum
Coral Records CRL 57417
1962

From the back cover: The trio sound (Bill on organ; Grady Tate, drums; Calvin Newborn, guitar) is featured on April In Paris, Canadian Sunset, On A Slow Boat To China and Hawaiian War Chant. An outstanding Latin rhythm section was added on Lisbon Antiqua, Poor People Of Paris, Brazil and Arrivederci Roma. Singapore, Bill's particular favorite of this album, and Manhattan were beautifully enhanced with the sound of the tympani, the subtle tones of Paul Gonzales' tenor saxophone, Les Spann's flute and Janet Putnam's harp... Midnight In Moscow and African Waltz showcase the trio abetted by the sounds of the harp, tenor saxophone and tympani.

From Billboard - August 11, 1962: The swinging organ work of Wild Bill Davis makes this a lively set that could sell across three markets, pop, R&B and jazz. He is backed by Grady Tate on drums and Calvin Newborn on guitar on most of the sides, a Latin rhythm section on others. But it's Davis's organ that sparks the record, which features such fine evergreens as "April In Paris," "Canadian Sunset," "Lisbon Antiqua," "Midnight In Moscow" and "African Waltz."

April In Paris
Canadian Sunset
On A Little Street In Singapore
Lisbon Antiqua
Midnight In Moscow
Brazil (Aquarela Do Brasil)
The Poor People Of Paris
Manhattan
On A Slow Boat To China
Arrivederci Roma (Goodbye To Rome)
African Waltz