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Sheila Guyse / Joya Sherrill - This Is Sheila / Sugar & Spice (2020)

Sheila Guyse / Joya Sherrill - This Is Sheila / Sugar & Spice (2020)

BAND/ARTIST: Sheila Guyse / Joya Sherrill

  • Title: This Is Sheila / Sugar & Spice
  • Year Of Release: 2020
  • Label: Best Voices Time Forgot
  • Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 75:00 min
  • Total Size: 421 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Let There Be Love
02. I Cover the Waterfront
03. I Warm Up
04. Out of This World
05. You Took Advantage of Me
06. You'd Be so Nice to Come Home To
07. Easy Does It
08. You Do Something to Me
09. Make Love to Me
10. You're Driving Me Crazy
11. I’m Glad There Is You
12. Easy to Love
13. Run
14. Little Bo Peep
15. Old Lady in a Shoe
16. Rain Rain Go Away
17. Three Blind Mice
18. Twinkle Twinkle Little Star
19. Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater
20. Hi Diddle Diddle
21. Humpty Dumpty
22. Mary Had a Little Lamb
23. Hickory Dickory Dock
24. Little Boy Blue
25. Rock-a-Bye Baby
26. Baby Me
27. Lush Life
28. Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
29. Thou Swell
30. Easy Street
31. End of a Love Affair


This is Sheila
In the 1940s and 1950s, Sheila Guyse (1925-2013) was a popular, well-loved figure both on stage and screen, comparable to such stars as Dorothy Dandridge, Lena Horne and Ruby Dee, all black actresses who broke through racial barriers. In 1943, at 18, she won first prize at the Apollo amateur contest, and was thoroughly thrilled when informed that she was the latest in a long line of winners that included Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan and Ruth Brown. She was labeled by New York critics as “Lena Horne’s newest rival.” In 1958, at 30, she recorded her only LP album, "This is Sheila," accompanied by an orchestra conducted by Leroy Holmes. In it, she exhibits the vocal personality of an unfettered singer, managing to impart with conviction and elan a sense of immediacy and vitality to a widely varied repertoire. The band provides some swinging and warmly pulsing support. Jet magazine described her as “a glamorous, high-octane performer under supper club spotlights.”

Sugar & Spice
Joya Sherrill (1924-2010) was seventeen when Duke Ellington hired her as a singer in 1942. The reason, she had written the lyrics for the bandleader’s theme song 'Take the 'A' Train,' in the young girl’s own words, “just for fun.” National acclaim would come to Joya soon thereafter with her 1944 performance of Ellington’s 'I’m Beginning to See the Light.' She left the band in early 1946, but continued to work with Ellington occasionally over the next two decades. “Duke would call me for jobs once a year at least,” she would admit. In 1959, Joya wrote the songs of her first album "Sugar and Spice," mixing the basic concepts of original lullabies with the more adult approach of jazz. Musical accompaniment and arrangements were provided by Luther Henderson, a famed Broadway orchestrator and arranger who had also worked with Ellington. Through her career, she sang in a long list of theaters scattered quite literally from coast to coast, and in 1962 emerged again in a big way when she was chosen to accompany the Benny Goodman Orchestra in a tour of Russia under U.S. Government auspices.


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  • User offline
  • stylemusiZ
  •  wrote in 14:49
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    • 0
Fantastic, many thanks!!!!
  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 23:35
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Many thanks for lossless!!
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  • bearfromdelaware
  •  wrote in 06:15
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Many thanks