Julie London - Whatever Julie Wants (1961)
BAND/ARTIST: Julie London
- Title: Whatever Julie Wants
- Year Of Release: 2016
- Label: Fine And Mellow[FM610]
- Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
- Quality: FLAC (image + .cue,log,scans)
- Total Time: 75:42
- Total Size: 434 MB(+3%)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
1 Why Don't You Do Right? 2:22
2 My Heart Belongs To Daddy 2:43
3 Hard Hearted Hannah 2:00
4 Do It Again 2:22
5 Take Back Your Mink 2:24
6 Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend 2:03
7 Daddy 2:16
8 An Occasional Man 2:33
9 Love For Sale 2:41
10 Always True To You In My Fashion 2:33
11 There'll Be Some Changes Made 2:27
12 Tired 2:50
13 Basin Street Blues 3:08
14 I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues 3:00
15 A Nightingale Can Sing The Blues 3:13
16 Get Set For The Blues 2:46
17 Invitation To The Blues 2:53
18 Bye Bye Blues 1:43
19 Meaning Of The Blues 3:00
20 About The Blues 3:10
21 Sunday Blues 2:58
22 The Blues Is All I Ever Had 2:55
23 Blues In The Night 3:43
24 Bouquet Of Blues 3:00
25 Baby Baby All The Time 2:27
26 Shadow Woman 2:41
27 Meaning Of The Blues (45 Single Take) 3:00
28 Dark 2:38
Julie London was equally famous for her cool vocal style and her rather cold beauty. She normally specialized in torch songs, singing bleak songs of lost love, but on Whatever Julie Wants, London plays the part of a vampish sexpot who treats love as a commodity to trade with wealthy men. Sure, it's a sexist album that's more famous for its cheesecake sleeve photo of London naked under fur, diamonds, money, and a strategically placed champagne bottle, but it is a fun album and one that can be enjoyed for its individual songs or its narrative thrust. While most concept albums featuring popular standards don't really follow a strict story line, Whatever Julie Wants does. It begins with the protagonist uttering an innocent lover's plea before mistreatment turns her into a jaded gold digger ("Daddy" and a host of other tracks), then a prostitute ("Love for Sale"), and a step up to kept woman ("Always True to You in My Fashion"). Just as things are looking bad, London finally realizes that you can live without a man and his money with "There'll Be Some Changes Made," because the onetime temptress is just too darn "Tired." This may not be Julie London's finest musical hour, but the album is undeniably entertaining and it offers a Technicolor sex comedy break from her usual world of shadowy film noir.~Nick Dedina
1 Why Don't You Do Right? 2:22
2 My Heart Belongs To Daddy 2:43
3 Hard Hearted Hannah 2:00
4 Do It Again 2:22
5 Take Back Your Mink 2:24
6 Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend 2:03
7 Daddy 2:16
8 An Occasional Man 2:33
9 Love For Sale 2:41
10 Always True To You In My Fashion 2:33
11 There'll Be Some Changes Made 2:27
12 Tired 2:50
13 Basin Street Blues 3:08
14 I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues 3:00
15 A Nightingale Can Sing The Blues 3:13
16 Get Set For The Blues 2:46
17 Invitation To The Blues 2:53
18 Bye Bye Blues 1:43
19 Meaning Of The Blues 3:00
20 About The Blues 3:10
21 Sunday Blues 2:58
22 The Blues Is All I Ever Had 2:55
23 Blues In The Night 3:43
24 Bouquet Of Blues 3:00
25 Baby Baby All The Time 2:27
26 Shadow Woman 2:41
27 Meaning Of The Blues (45 Single Take) 3:00
28 Dark 2:38
Julie London was equally famous for her cool vocal style and her rather cold beauty. She normally specialized in torch songs, singing bleak songs of lost love, but on Whatever Julie Wants, London plays the part of a vampish sexpot who treats love as a commodity to trade with wealthy men. Sure, it's a sexist album that's more famous for its cheesecake sleeve photo of London naked under fur, diamonds, money, and a strategically placed champagne bottle, but it is a fun album and one that can be enjoyed for its individual songs or its narrative thrust. While most concept albums featuring popular standards don't really follow a strict story line, Whatever Julie Wants does. It begins with the protagonist uttering an innocent lover's plea before mistreatment turns her into a jaded gold digger ("Daddy" and a host of other tracks), then a prostitute ("Love for Sale"), and a step up to kept woman ("Always True to You in My Fashion"). Just as things are looking bad, London finally realizes that you can live without a man and his money with "There'll Be Some Changes Made," because the onetime temptress is just too darn "Tired." This may not be Julie London's finest musical hour, but the album is undeniably entertaining and it offers a Technicolor sex comedy break from her usual world of shadowy film noir.~Nick Dedina
Jazz | Vocal Jazz | FLAC / APE | CD-Rip
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