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The Girl I Left Home For

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Download links and information about The Girl I Left Home For by Gwen Verdon. This album was released in 1956 and it belongs to Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 34:51 minutes.

Artist: Gwen Verdon
Release date: 1956
Genre: Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 12
Duration: 34:51
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Ain't Misbehavin' (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 2:31
2. Sand in My Shoes (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 3:24
3. It's a Hot Night in Alaska (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 2:12
4. Mister and Missus Fitch (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 2:55
5. Bettin' on a Man (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 2:57
6. Why Can't I (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 4:17
7. I've Got the World on a String (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 3:24
8. Jenny (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 3:16
9. Find Me a Primitive Man (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 1:50
10. No-Talent Joe (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 2:38
11. The Lady Is a Tramp (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 2:24
12. Daddy (featuring Joe Reisman E Orquestra, Joe Reisman) 3:03

Details

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Broadway star Gwen Verdon didn't make too much of a dent in the jazz-pop market, but this fine album from the late '50s makes one wish she had. Cut after she had established herself in productions of Can-Can and Damn Yankees, The Girl I Left Home For finds Verdon reveling in fine selection of rarely heard Tin Pan Alley songs — in a jazz context at least. Helped out by Joe Reisman's fluid blend of pop gloss and lounge swing, Verdon mixes in well-known numbers like "The Lady Is a Tramp" and "Ain't Misbehavin'" with obscure novelties like "Hot Night in Alaska" and Cole Porter's "Mr. and Mrs. Fitch" (from The Gay Divorce). Taking off some of the glib edge plied by many a Broadway siren, Verdon judiciously balances vocal theatrics with some loose and spontaneous phrasing. At times, she even sounds a bit like Blossom Dearie, who, like Verdon, had a knack for nicely dusting off less well-traveled gems from the stage. Topped off with the benignly exotic, Latin-tinged "Sand in My Shoes" and "No-Talent Joe," The Girl I Left Home For will definitely please fans of vintage vocals, especially those who like their pop with a heavy dose of show tune humor and allure.