Wednesday, April 30, 2008



Peggy Lee - Best Of Miss Peggy Lee
Easy Listening | mp3 VBR(192 kbps) | 64.6 MB | 1998


Culled from the Grammy-winning deluxe box set MISS PEGGY LEE, this re-mastered collection is perhaps the most compact overview of Peggy Lee*s early and late Capitol periods. Her late-*40s hits, done in collaboration with guitarist/husband Dave Barbour, have never sounded better, and include here essential Peggy Lee originals like the sly “I Don*t Know Enough About You,” “It*s a Good Day,” and the politically incorrect (even for the time) “Manana.”

Category: Easy Listening, Vocal, Greatest Hits Collections
Label: Capitol / E
MI Records
Orig Year 1998
Discs 1
Street Date Apr 06, 2004
Studio/Live Studio
Mono/Stereo Stereo
Producer Brad Benedict (Compilation)
Additional Info: Without DVD

Track List:

1. Waiting For The Train To Come In
2. I Don*t Know Enough About You
3. It*s All Over Now
4. It*s A Good Day
5. Chi-Baba, Chi-Baba (My Bambino Go To Sleep)
6. Golden Earrings
7. Why Don*t You Do It Right?
8. Manana (Is Soon Enough For Me)
9. Riders In The Sky (A Cowboy Legend)
10. Happiness Is A Thing Called Joe
11. Fever
12. Alright, Okay, You Win
13. I*m A Woman
14. Pass Me By
15. Big Spender
16. Is That All There Is?


This release does not includes a bonus DVD entitled FEVER: THE MUSIC OF PEGGY LEE.




This release does not includes a b
onus DVD entitled FEVER: THE MUSIC OF PEGGY LEE.

THE BEST OF MISS PEGGY LEE is a companion disc to the 4-CD box set MISS PEGGY LEE.

Culled from the Grammy-winning deluxe box set MISS PEGGY LEE, this re-mastered collection is perhaps the most compact overview of Peggy Lee*s early and late Capitol periods. Her late-*40s hits, done in collaboration with guitarist/husband Dave Barbour, have never sounded better, and include here essential Peggy Lee originals like the sly “I Don*t Know Enough About You,” “It*s a Good Day,” and the politically incorrect (even for the time) “Manana.” Since Lee spent the first half of the *50s at Decca, her return to Capitol in 1957 unveiled a seasoned pro in a completely different (improved) recording environment. These are the years of “Fever” and “Alright, Okay, You Win.” It*s interesting that as the singer commanded more deluxe studio treatment, she and her producers opted for a “big beat” R&B feeling. Nevertheless, Peggy Lee*s musical instincts never hurt her c
ommercially as her 1969 swan song, the Lieber-and-Stoller-produced “Is That All There Is?,” proved all too well.

Enjoy

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