Jump to content

With All My Heart (Frankie Laine album): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m typo
added links
Line 22: Line 22:
'''''With All My Heart''''' is a 1955 album by [[Frankie Laine]] with the orchestras of Harry Geller and Carl Fischer.<ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|The Billboard]]| title=Review and Ratings of New Popular Albums| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jQoEAAAAMBAJ| date=July 21, 1956| volume=68| issue=29| page=30|accessdate=February 18, 2014}}</ref>
'''''With All My Heart''''' is a 1955 album by [[Frankie Laine]] with the orchestras of Harry Geller and Carl Fischer.<ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|The Billboard]]| title=Review and Ratings of New Popular Albums| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jQoEAAAAMBAJ| date=July 21, 1956| volume=68| issue=29| page=30|accessdate=February 18, 2014}}</ref>


These songs were recorded for the [[Mercury Records]] label during the Forties and 1950. Laine was contracted by [[Columbia Records]] in 1951. "[[Get Happy (song)|Get Happy]]", written by Arlen and Kochler, had already been recorded by Laine with [[Carl Fischer (pianist)|Carl Fischer]]'s Orchestra and was originally released in 1951 with "I Would Do Most Anything for You" by Hill, Williams, Hopkins as B-side - also on this album. Fischer had died the year before this album was released.
These songs were recorded for the [[Mercury Records]] label during the Forties and 1950. Laine was contracted by [[Columbia Records]] in 1951. "[[Get Happy (song)|Get Happy]]", written by [[Harold Arlen]] and [[Ted Koehler]], had already been recorded by Laine with [[Carl Fischer (pianist)|Carl Fischer]]'s Orchestra and was originally released in 1951 with "[[(I Would Do) Anything for You]]" by [[Claude Hopkins]], [[Alex Hill (musician)|Alexander Hill]] and Bobby Williams as B-side - also on this album. Fischer had died the year before this album was released.


==Track listing==
==Track listing==
Line 33: Line 33:
# "With All My Heart"
# "With All My Heart"
# "What Could Be Sweeter" – a 1946 song written by Laine himself with Carl Fischer.
# "What Could Be Sweeter" – a 1946 song written by Laine himself with Carl Fischer.
# "I Would Do Most Anything for You"
# "[[(I Would Do) Anything for You|I Would Do Most Anything for You]]"
# "[[Get Happy (song)|Get Happy]]"
# "[[Get Happy (song)|Get Happy]]"
# "[[South of the Border (1939 song)|South of the Border]]" – by Jimmy Kennedy and Michael Carr
# "[[South of the Border (1939 song)|South of the Border]]" – by Jimmy Kennedy and Michael Carr
# "You Let Me Out in the Rain"
# "You Left Me Out in the Rain"


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 15:17, 19 April 2022

With All My Heart
Studio album by
Released1955
LanguageEnglish
LabelMercury
Frankie Laine chronology
Concert Date
(1955)
With All My Heart
(1955)
Command Performance
(1956)

With All My Heart is a 1955 album by Frankie Laine with the orchestras of Harry Geller and Carl Fischer.[1]

These songs were recorded for the Mercury Records label during the Forties and 1950. Laine was contracted by Columbia Records in 1951. "Get Happy", written by Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler, had already been recorded by Laine with Carl Fischer's Orchestra and was originally released in 1951 with "(I Would Do) Anything for You" by Claude Hopkins, Alexander Hill and Bobby Williams as B-side - also on this album. Fischer had died the year before this album was released.

Track listing

  1. "Isle of Capri"
  2. "That's How Rhythm Was Born"
  3. "Ain't Misbehavin'"
  4. "The Gang That Sang Heart of My Heart" – written by Ben Ryan
  5. "Inspiration Point"
  6. "Come Love with Me"
  7. "With All My Heart"
  8. "What Could Be Sweeter" – a 1946 song written by Laine himself with Carl Fischer.
  9. "I Would Do Most Anything for You"
  10. "Get Happy"
  11. "South of the Border" – by Jimmy Kennedy and Michael Carr
  12. "You Left Me Out in the Rain"

References

  1. ^ "Review and Ratings of New Popular Albums". The Billboard. Vol. 68, no. 29. July 21, 1956. p. 30. Retrieved February 18, 2014.