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She was one of the first jazz singers ever to record. The reissued tracks on Columbia’s superb
compilation were originally released between December 1925 and November 1940. Here, the clear
sound quality of her voice and the balanced, all star accompaniment beside her makes The Best
Of Ethel Waters a fine addition to the CD library.
Show tunes carried Waters from honky-tonks to Broadway and Hollywood. With “Stormy
Weather” from Cotton Club Parade of 1933, she was noticed by the public. Tommy & Jimmy
Dorsey, Bunny Berigan, Joe Venuti and others accompany her in a deeply heartfelt interpretation.
The magnetic attraction of her voice appears in both early blues themes and later showstoppers.
The 1925 recording of “Maybe Not At All” proves interesting, since her accompanists are Pearl
Wright on piano, Joe Smith on cornet, and Coleman Hawkins on baritone saxophone. For that
piece, Waters moves confidently through a suite of changing interpretations with a knowing gleam in
her eye. Both in all-star format and with large studio orchestras, this entertaining vocal compilation
provides a knowledgeable look at Waters and what she could do with a show tune.
~ Jim Santella
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Track Listing: Heat Wave; I Just Couldn’t Take It Baby; Harlem On My Mind; Hottentot Promenade; Stormy
Weather; Come Up and See Me Sometime; Shake That Thing; (What Did I Do To Be So) Black and
Blue?; Please Don’t Talk About Me When I’m Gone; Maybe Not at All; Memories Of You; You Can’t
Stop Me From Loving You; You’re Lucky To Me; Cabin in the Sky; Thief in the Night; Taking a
Chance on Love; Honey in the Honeycomb.
Personnel: Ethel Waters- vocals; Joe Smith- cornet; Bunny Berigan, Sterling Bose, Manny Klein, Shirley Clay,
Charlie Teagarden- trumpet; Jack Teagarden, Tommy Dorsey- trombone; Jimmy Dorsey- clarinet,
alto saxophone; Larry Binyon- clarinet, tenor saxophone; Benny Goodman- clarinet; Art Karle- tenor
saxophone; Coleman Hawkins- baritone saxophone; Dick McDonough, Tony Colucci- guitar; Joe
Sullivan, Rube Bloom, Fulton McGrath, Frank Signorelli, Pearl Wright- piano; Joe Tarto, Artie
Bernstein- bass; Stan King, Gene Krupa- drums; Joe Venuti, Harry Hoffman, Walt Edelstein, Lou
Kosloff, Ben Selvin- violin; others.
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