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Brenda Lee - Greatest Hits of Brenda Lee (2020)

Brenda Lee - Greatest Hits of Brenda Lee (2020)

BAND/ARTIST: Brenda Lee

  • Title: Greatest Hits of Brenda Lee
  • Year Of Release: 2020
  • Label: Nostalgic Melody Music Production
  • Genre: Pop, Rockabilly, Country
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
  • Total Time: 4:18:20
  • Total Size: 1.65 GB / 596 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. I Want to Be Wanted
02. I'm Sorry
03. Some of These Days
04. Pennies from Heaven
05. Baby Face
06. A Good Man Is Hard to Find
07. Just Because
08. Toot, Toot, Tootsie
09. Ballin' the Jack
10. Rock-A-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody
11. Pretty Baby
12. Side by Side
13. Back in Your Own Backyard
14. St. Louis Blues
15. Dynamite
16. Weep No More My Baby
17. Jambalaya
18. Just Let Me Dream
19. Be My Love Agan
20. My Baby Likes Western Guys
21. Sweet Nothin's
22. That's All You Gott Do
23. Heading Home
24. Love & Learn
25. Let's Jump the Broomstick
26. When My Dreamboat Comes Home
27. Just a Little
28. Pretend
29. Teach Me Tonight
30. Wee Wee Willies
31. Hallelujah, I Love Him So
32. Walking to New Orleans
33. Blueberry Hill
34. Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree
35. We Three
36. Build a Big Fence
37. If I Didn't Care
38. Emotions
39. Just Another Lie
40. Crazy Talk
41. I'm in the Mood for Love
42. Around the World
43. Swanee River Rock
44. If You Love Me
45. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
46. I'm Learning About Love
47. When I Fall in Love
48. Goergia on My Mind
49. Lover Come Back to Me
50. All the Way
51. Dum Dum
52. On the Sunny Side of the Treet
53. Talkin' Bout You
54. Cry
55. Someone to Love Me
56. Do I Worry
57. Tragedy
58. Kansas City
59. Lazy River
60. Eventually
61. Speak to Me Pretty
62. Big Chance
63. I Miss You So
64. You've Got Me Crying Again
65. It's the Talk of the Town
66. Send Me Some Lovin'
67. How Deep Is the Ocean
68. You Alway's Hurt the One You Love
69. I'll Always Be in Love with You
70. Fools Rush In
71. Only You
72. Hold Me
73. I'll Be Seeing You
74. Christy Christmas
75. One Step at a Time
76. One Teenager to Another
77. I'm Sitting on Top of the World
78. Fool No 1
79. White Silver Sands
80. Just out of Reach
81. Sweethearts on Parade
82. It's a Lonesome Old Town
83. Organ Grinder's Swing
84. Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home
85. Why Me
86. Rock-A-Bye Baby Blues
87. Someday
88. You Can Depend on Me
89. Ring-A-My Phone
90. Gonna Find Me a Bluebird
91. Break It to Me Gently
92. Everybody Loves Me but You
93. Heart in Hand
94. Valley of Tears
95. Save Your Lovin' for Me
96. It's Never Too Late
97. Anybody but Me
98. So Deep
99. Here Comes That Feeling Again
100. It Started All over Again
101. All Alone Am I

One of the biggest pop stars of the early '60s, Brenda Lee hasn't attracted as much critical respect as she deserves. She is sometimes inaccurately characterized as one of the few female teen idols. More crucially, the credit for achieving success with pop-country crossovers usually goes to Patsy Cline, although Lee's efforts in this era were arguably of equal importance. While she made few recordings of note after the mid-'60s, the best of her first decade is fine indeed, encompassing not just the pop ballads that were her biggest hits, but straight country and some surprisingly fierce rockabilly.

Lee was a child prodigy, appearing on national television by the age of ten, and making her first recordings for Decca the following year (1956). Her first few Decca singles, in fact, make a pretty fair bid for the best preteen rock & roll performances this side of Michael Jackson. "BIGELOW 6-200," "Dynamite," and "Little Jonah" are all exceptionally powerful rockabilly performances, with robust vocals and white-hot backing from the cream of Nashville's session musicians (including Owen Bradley, Grady Martin, Hank Garland, and Floyd Cramer). Lee would not have her first big hits until 1960, when she tempered the rockabilly with teen idol pop on "Sweet Nothin's," which went to the Top Five.

The comparison between Lee and Cline is to be expected, given that both singers were produced by Owen Bradley in the early '60s. Naturally, many of the same session musicians and backup vocalists were employed. Brenda, however, had a bigger in with the pop audience, not just because she was still a teenager, but because her material was more pop than Cline's, and not as country. Between 1960 and 1962, she had a stunning series of huge hits: "I'm Sorry," "I Want to Be Wanted," "Emotions," "You Can Depend on Me," "Dum Dum," "Fool #1," "Break It to Me Gently," and "All Alone Am I" all made the Top Ten. Their crossover appeal is no mystery. While these were ballads, they were delivered with enough lovesick yearning to appeal to adolescents, and enough maturity for the adults. The first-class melodic songwriting and professional orchestral production guaranteed that they would not be ghettoized in the country market.

Lee's last Top Ten pop hit was in 1963, with "Losing You." While she still had hits through the mid-'60s, these became smaller and less frequent with the rise of the British Invasion (although she remained very popular overseas). The best of her later hits, "Is It True?," was a surprisingly hard-rocking performance, recorded in 1964 in London with Jimmy Page on guitar. 1966's "Coming on Strong," however, would prove to be her last Top 20 entry.

In the early '70s, Lee reunited with Owen Bradley and, like so many early white rock & roll stars, returned to country music. For a time she was fairly successful in this field, making the country Top Ten half-a-dozen times in 1973-1974. Although she remained active as a recording and touring artist, for the last couple of decades she's been little more than a living legend, directing her intermittent artistic efforts to the country audience. ~ Richie Unterberger


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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 19:32
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Many thanks for lossless.