Create account Log in

I'll Be Seeing You: A Tribute to Carmen McRae

[Edit]

Download links and information about I'll Be Seeing You: A Tribute to Carmen McRae by Carmen McRae. This album was released in 1995 and it belongs to Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Pop genres. It contains 39 tracks with total duration of 02:05:35 minutes.

Artist: Carmen McRae
Release date: 1995
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Pop
Tracks: 39
Duration: 02:05:35
Buy on iTunes $19.99
Buy on Amazon $18.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Something to Live For 3:14
2. Speak Low 3:10
3. But Beautiful 2:58
4. Midnight Sun 3:47
5. Good Morning, Heartache 3:22
6. A Ghost of a Chance 3:12
7. We'll Be Together Again 3:06
8. Star Eyes 3:11
9. Whatever Lola Wants 3:01
10. Lush Life 3:38
11. Until the Real Thing Comes Along 3:24
12. You Don't Know Me 2:45
13. Skyliner 2:59
14. The Party's Over 2:52
15. East of the Sun (West of the Moon) 2:17
16. Dream of Life 4:02
17. Perdido 2:18
18. Exactly Like You 2:11
19. I'm Thru with Love 4:11
20. I'll See You Again 2:42
21. Invitation 2:55
22. Bye Bye Blackbird 3:25
23. Flamingo 3:44
24. Oh Yes, I Remember Clifford 3:01
25. If I Were a Bell 1:55
26. Any Old Time 3:11
27. What's New 2:30
28. The Night We Called It a Day 4:28
29. Please Be Kind 3:16
30. The Thrill Is Gone 3:54
31. By Myself 3:15
32. Do You Know Why? 2:54
33. The More I See You 4:03
34. When Your Lover Has Gone 3:34
35. If I Could Be with You 2:23
36. I Only Have Eyes for You 3:50
37. I'm Glad There Is You 3:56
38. Ain't Misbehavin' 3:19
39. I'll Be Seeing You 3:42

Details

[Edit]

This two-CD set mostly brings back material from singer Carmen McRae's Decca years that had been bypassed by other reissues. The oversized box, after a memorable version of "Something to Live For" (in which McRae is accompanied by the song's composer Billy Strayhorn), has many orchestra tracks that are weighed down by middle-of-the-road arrangements more suitable to Doris Day than to McRae; only "Whatever Lola Wants" is memorable among the routine ballads of 1955-56. However, things start improving with "Skyliner" and a March 1957 set with just a rhythm section is quite enjoyable; McRae herself contributes some effective piano on swinging renditions of "Perdido" and "Exactly like You." The majority of the later selections use orchestras but the charts are more jazz-oriented and McRae (who was in her mid-to-late 30s during the period) had clearly grown as a singer; tenor-saxophonist Ben Webster helps out on "Bye Bye Blackbird" and "Flamingo." Overall this set is worth picking up for fans of Carmen McRae's early years, giving one a fine overview of her talents in the 1950s.