This article needs additional citations for verification .(June 2019) |
Songs recorded by Doris Day | |
---|---|
Released songs | 439 |
This is a partial list of Doris Day's recorded songs. Note that if no album name is given, the song was only issued as a single; if an album name is given, the song was only released as an album, unless it is stated that the song was released both as a single and on an album. All recordings were released by Columbia Records in the United States, except for those tracks included on The Love Album, and two songs which never were released in the US until incorporated in a compact disc album called "The 1960s Singles" in 2002: "Let the Little Girl Limbo" and "Oo-Wee Baby." Doris Day's hits in the UK between 1955 and 1958 were released on Philips Records.
Song | Music by | Lyrics by | Recording date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
A | ||||
"Abide with Me" | William H. Monk | Henry F. Lyte | July 11, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone |
"Again" | Lionel Newman | Dorcas Cochran | March 23, 1949 #1 Charted Hit in 1949 | (with John Rarig's orch. and The Mellomen) several other versions charted; Doris Day's was highest-charting version at #2 on Billboard chart |
"Ain't We Got Fun?" | Richard A. Whiting | Raymond B. Egan Gus Kahn | November 13, 1951 TOP 10 ALBUM IN 51 | (duet with Danny Thomas, Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams |
February 20, 1953 | with the Norman Luboff Choir from the album By the Light of the Silvery Moon | |||
"All Alone" | Irving Berlin | June 6, 1967 | from the album The Love Album | |
"All I Do is Dream of You" | Nacio Herb Brown | Arthur Freed | May 2, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed |
"All through the Day" | Jerome Kern | Oscar Hammerstein II | March 6, 1946 TOP 10 HIT IN 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) |
"Another Go Around" | Noël Regney Gloria Shayne | May 13, 1965 | (with Mort Garson's orchestra) | |
"Anything You Can Do" | Irving Berlin | October 8, 1962 | (duet with Robert Goulet) from the album Annie Get Your Gun | |
"Any Way the Wind Blows" | Joseph Hooven Marilyn Hooven | William Dunham | January 12, 1959 TOP 40 HIT | (with Frank DeVol's orchestra) |
"Are You Lonesome Tonight?" | Lou Handman | Roy Turk | June 6, 1967 | from the album The Love Album |
"Aren't You Glad You're You? | Jimmy Van Heusen | Johnny Burke | September 15, 1945 TOP 10 CHARTED HIT | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown] |
"As Long As He Needs Me" | Lionel Bart | October 29, 1963 | from the album Love Him | |
"At Last" | Harry Warren | Mack Gordon | September 15, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey |
"At the Café Rendezvous" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | May 13, 1949 | (with John Rarig's orchestra) |
"Au Revoir Is Goodbye with a Smile" | Mort Garson | Bob Hilliard | June 18, 1965 | (with Mort Garson's orchestra) |
"Autumn Leaves" | Joseph Kosma | French: Jacques Prévert English: Johnny Mercer | September 21, 1956 | from the album Day by Day |
B | ||||
"Baby Doll" | Harry Warren | Johnny Mercer | September 12, 1951 | (with Paul Weston's orchestra) |
"Be a Child at Christmas Time" | Martin Broones | William A. Luce | June 17, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album |
"Before I Loved You" | Joan Whitney Alex Kramer | March 14, 1950 | (with George Wyle orchestra) | |
"Be Mine Tonight (Noche De Ronda)" | Maria Teresa Lara | Spanish: Maria Teresa Lara English: Sunny Skylar | November 9, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers |
"Be My Little Baby Bumble Bee" | Henry I. Marshall | Stanley Murphy | January 30, 1953 | with the Norman Luboff Choir and Paul Weston's orchestra released both as a single and on the album By The Light Of The Silvery Moon |
"Be Still and Know" | July 13, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone | ||
"The Best Thing for You" | Irving Berlin | September 13, 1950 | ||
"Be True to Me (Sabor A Mi)" | Alarcon Carillo | Spanish: Alarcon Carillo English: Mel Mitchell | November 5, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers |
"Bewitched, Bothered & Bewildered" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | May 13, 1949 #1 HIT | (with John Rarig's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams 1,000,000+ sales; #1 on Cash Box chart and in Australia |
"The Black Hills of Dakota" | Sammy Fain | Paul Francis Webster | July 16, 1953 | released both as a single (#7 in the U.K.) and on the album, Calamity Jane |
"Blame My Absent-Minded Heart" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | April 15, 1949 | (with John Rarig's orchestra) |
"Bless This House" | Helen Taylor May H. Morgan | July 13, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone | |
"Bluebird on Your Windowsill" | Elizabeth Clarke Robert Mellin | September 14, 1949 | (with George Siravo orchestra) | |
"Blues in the Night" | Harold Arlen | Johnny Mercer | November 19, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) |
"The Blue Train" | Jim Harbert Paul Manning | January 25, 1950 | (with Jim Harbert's orchestra) | |
"Bright and Shiny" | Bob Sherman Dick Sherman | December 23. 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny | |
"A Bushel and a Peck" | Frank Loesser | September 13, 1950 TOP 20 HIT IN 1950 | (with David Rose's orchestra) | |
"But Beautiful" | Jimmy Van Heusen | Johnny Burke | September 26, 1956 | from the album Day by Day |
"But Not for Me" | George Gershwin | Ira Gershwin | September 26, 1956 | from the album Day by Day |
"By the Light of the Silvery Moon" | Gus Edwards | Edward Madden | February 13, 1953 | with the Norman Luboff Choir from the album of the same name |
C | ||||
"Canadian Capers" | Gus Chandler Bert White Henry Cohen | January 7, 1949 TOP 20 HIT | (with John Rarig's orchestra) (see also "Cuttin' Capers" below) | |
"Candy Lips" | Fred Rose | December 5, 1952 TOP 20 HIT | (duet with Johnnie Ray, Paul Weston's orchestra) | |
"Can't Help Falling in Love" | George David Weiss Hugo Peretti Luigi Creatore) | October 29, 1963 | from the album Love Him | |
"Caprice" | Larry Marks | November 4, 1966 | ||
"Catch the Bouquet" | Fred Spielman | Hans Haller | May 13, 1965 | (with Mort Garson's orchestra) |
"Cheek to Cheek" | Irving Berlin | October 16, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) | |
"The Children's Marching Song (Nick Nack Paddy Whack)" | traditional | July 14, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song | |
"A Chocolate Sundae on a Saturday Night" | Hal David Fred Wise Al Frisch | November 6, 1947 | ||
"Choo Choo Train (Ch-Ch-Foo)" | Marc Fontenoy | Marc Fontenoy Jack Lawrence | 1953 [1] | |
"Christmas Present" | Sydney Robin | June 18, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album | |
"The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire)" | Mel Tormé | Bob Wells | August 29, 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) |
June 16, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album | |||
"Christmas Story" | Walsh | September 11, 1950 | released both as single and on the album On Moonlight Bay | |
"The Christmas Waltz" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | June 18, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album |
"The Circus is on Parade" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | 1962 | (with Jimmy Durante and Martha Raye) from Billy Rose's Jumbo |
"Clap Yo' Hands" | George Gershwin | Ira Gershwin | December 19, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny |
"Close Your Eyes" | Bernice Petkere | August 27, 1957 | from the album Day by Night | |
December 16, 1961 | (with the André Previn Trio) from the album Duet | |||
"The Comb and Paper Polka" | Hugo Hollander Michael Feahy | August 31, 1950 | (with Frank Yankovic & his Yanks) | |
"Come to Baby, Do!" | Inez James Sidney Miller | September 6, 1945 Hit the charts at #13 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) | |
September 21, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey | |||
"Confess" | Bennie Benjamin George David Weiss | November 21, 1947 TOP 10 HIT B/W LOVE SOMEBODY | (duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo orchestra) (also done by Patti Page) | |
"Control Yourself" | André Previn | Dory Langdon Previn | November 30, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet |
"Crazy Rhythm" | Joseph Meyer Roger Wolfe Kahn Irving Caesar | July 25, 1950 | (duet with Gene Nelson & The Page Cavanaugh Trio) released both as single and on the album Tea for Two | |
"Cuddle up a Little Closer" | Karl Hoschna | Otto Harbach | March 30, 1951 | (with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as single and on the album On Moonlight Bay |
"Cuttin' Capers" | Gus Chandler Bert White Henry Cohen | Earl Burnett Ralph Blane Harry Warren | November 29, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers |
D | ||||
"Daffa Down Dilly" | Jim Harbert Charlene Harbert | January 25, 1960 | (with Jim Harbert's orchestra) | |
"Dansero" | Richard Hayman Lee Daniels Sol Parker | November 9, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers | |
"Darn That Dream" | Jimmy Van Heusen | Eddie De Lange | May 26, 1950 | from the album Day Dreams |
"Day by Day" | Axel Stordahl Paul Weston | Sammy Cahn | January 16, 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown)#15 on charts |
September 21, 1956 | from the album of the same name | |||
"Daydreaming" | André Previn | Dory Langdon Previn | December 16, 1961 | (with André Previn's orchestra) from the album Duet |
"The Deadwood Stage (Whip-Crack-Away)" | August 27, 1953 | released both as a single and on the album, Calamity Jane | ||
"Deck the Halls with Boughs of Holly" | June 10, 1959 | (with Frank De Vol's orchestra) unreleased until its inclusion on the Bear Family box set Que Sera, Sera in 1996 | ||
"The Deevil, Devil, Divil" | Carl Sigman | Bob Russell Lee Kaydan | March 27, 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) |
"Do Do Do" | George Gershwin | Ira Gershwin | July 14, 1950 | (with Axel Stordahl's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Tea for Two |
"Doin' What Comes Naturally" | Irving Berlin | October 8, 1962 | from the album Annie Get Your Gun | |
"Domino" | Louis Ferrari | French: Jacques Plante English: Don Raye | October 4, 1951 | (with Paul Weston's orchestra) |
"Do Not Disturb" | Ben Raleigh | Mark Barkan | June 18, 1965 | (with Mort Garson's orchestra) |
"Don't Take Your Love From Me" | Henry Nemo | September 17, 1956 | from the album Day by Day | |
"Do Re Mi" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II) | July 14, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song |
"Dream a Little Dream of Me" | Officially credited to Fabian Andre and Wilbur Schwandt; claimed by Milton Adolphus in some sources | Gus Kahn | August 23, 1957 | from the album Day by Night |
E | ||||
"Easy to Love" | Cole Porter | November 12, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) | |
"Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)" | Carl Sigman | Herb Magidson | January 13, 1950 TOP 20 HIT | (with George Wyle's orchestra) |
"The Everlasting Arms" | Martin Broones | Paul Francis Webster | September 11, 1950 | (with the Norman Luboff Choir) |
December 22, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know | |||
"Everybody Loves a Lover" | Robert Allen | Richard Adler | May 12, 1958 TOP 10 HIT | (with Frank DeVol's orchestra) |
"Everybody Loves My Baby" | Jack Palmer | Spencer Williams | November 18, 1954 | from the album Love Me or Leave Me |
"Every Little Movement (Has a Meaning All Its Own)" | Karl Hoschna | Otto Harbach | March 30, 1951 | (with the Norman Luboff Choir and Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay |
"Every Now and Then (You Come Around)" | Eddie Snyder Richard Ahlert | January 21, 1966 | (with Mort Garson's orchestra) | |
"Everywhere You Go" | Larry Shay Mark Fisher | Joe Goodwin | March 23, 1949 | (with the Mellomen and John Rarig's orchestra) |
F | ||||
"A Faded Summer Love" | Phil Baxter | June 6, 1967 | from the album The Love Album | |
"Falling" | Bruce Johnston Don Wyatt | January 25, 1960 | (with Jim Harbert's orchestra) | |
"Falling in Love Again" | Frederick Hollander | Sammy Lerner | December 16, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet |
"A Fellow Needs a Girl" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | December 11, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know |
"Fine and Dandy" | Kay Swift | Paul James (James Warburg) | December 8, 1950 | (with the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway |
"Fit as a Fiddle (And Ready for Love)" | Arthur Freed Al Goodhart (or Goodheart) | November 18, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers | |
"Fly Me to the Moon (In Other Words)" | Bart Howard | November 5, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers | |
"A Foggy Day" | George Gershwin | Ira Gershwin | October 29, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) |
"Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear to Tread)" | Rube Bloom | Johnny Mercer | December 16, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet |
"For All We Know" | J. Fred Coots | Sam M. Lewis | June 9, 1967 | from the album The Love Album |
"A Full Time Job" | Gerry Teifer | October 16, 1952 TOP 20 HIT in U.S.; #11 in U.K. | (duet with Johnnie Ray, Paul Weston's orchestra) | |
"Funny" | Hal Shaper Antonio DeVito Giorgio Calabrese | November 5, 1963 | from the album Love Him | |
G | ||||
"The Game of Broken Hearts" | Don Larkin Sally Clark Eddie McMullen | October 19, 1949 | (as "Doris Day with her Country Cousins") | |
"Gently Johnny" | Kay Twomey Fred Wise Ben Weisman | February 9, 1952 | (duet with Guy Mitchell, Paul Weston's orchestra) | |
"Get Out and Get Under the Moon" | Larry Shay | Charles Tobias William Jerome | November 25, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers |
"Getting to Know You" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II) | July 7, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song |
"Give a Little Whistle" | Leigh Harline | Ned Washington | July 10, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song |
"Give Me Time" | Alec Wilder | December 16, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet | |
"The Glass Bottom Boat" | Joe Lubin | January 21, 1966 | (with Mort Garson's orchestra) | |
"Gone with the Wind" | Allie Wrubel | Herbert Magidson | September 17, 1956 | from the album Day by Day |
"Gotta Feelin'" | December 23, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny | ||
"A Guy Is a Guy" | Oscar Brand | July 2, 1952 #1 on Billboard chart; #2 on Cash Box chart; MILLION SELLER | (with Paul Weston's orchestra) | |
"The Gypsy in My Soul" | Clay Boland | Moe Jaffe | September 17, 1956 | from the album Day by Day |
H | ||||
"Happy Talk" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | December 19, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny |
"Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas" | Hugh Martin Ralph Blane | June 16, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album | |
"He'll Have to Cross the Atlantic" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | May 17, 1945 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) |
"Hello, My Lover, Goodbye" | John W. Green | Edward Heyman | September 21, 1956 | from the album Day by Day |
"Here in My Arms" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | July 14, 1950 | (with Axel Stordahl's orchestra) released both as single and on the album Tea for Two |
"Here We Go Again" | Joe Seneca | January 25, 1960 | (with Jim Harbert's orchestra) | |
"He's Home For a Little While" | Ted Shapiro | Kermit Goell | February 1, 1945 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) |
"He's So Married" | Jimmie Dodd | Will Fowler | August 15, 1958 | with Frank De Vol and his Orchestra |
"Hey There" | Jerry Ross | Richard Adler | NEVER RELEASED AS A SINGLE; briefly featured in film, PAJAJA GAME; | |
"High Hopes" | Jimmy Van Heusen | Sammy Cahn | July 14, 1964 FEATURED IN THE FILM, "ANTZ" | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song |
"Hold Me in Your Arms" | Ray Heindorf Don Pippin | Charles Henderson | September 24, 1954 | from the album Young at Heart |
"Hoop-Dee-Doo" | Milton De Lugg | Frank Loesser | March 14, 1950 #4 on Cash Box chart; #17 on Billboard chart | (with the Mellomen and George Wyle's orchestra) |
"Hooray for Hollywood" | Richard A. Whiting | Johnny Mercer | November 19, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) |
"How Insensitive" | Antônio Carlos Jobim | Portuguese: Vinícius de Moraes English: Norman Gimbel | November 9, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers |
"A Hundred Years from Today" | Victor Young | Ned Washington Joe Young | December 17, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know |
I | ||||
"I Believe in Dreams" | Jim Harbert | May 3, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed | |
"I Can Do Without You" | August 5, 1953 | (duet with Howard Keel) from the album, Calamity Jane | ||
"I Didn't Know What Time It Was" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | June 17, 1949 | from the album Day Dreams |
"I Didn't Slip, I Wasn't Pushed, I Fell" | George Wyle | Edward Pola | March 14, 1950 TOP 20 HIT | (with the Mellomen, George Wyle orchestra) |
"I Don't Wanna Be Kissed (By Anyone But You)" | Harold Spina | Jack Elliott | November 30, 1949 | (with George Siravo orchestra) |
"I Don't Want to Walk Without You" | Jule Styne | Frank Loesser | 1965 | (medley with "I Had the Craziest Dream") from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey |
"I Feel Like a Feather in the Breeze" | Harry Revel | Mack Gordon | November 29, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers |
"If I Can Help Somebody" | A. Bazel Androzzo | July 12, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone | |
"If I Could Be with You" | James P. Johnson | Henry Creamer | from the album Day Dreams | |
"If I Give My Heart to You" | Jimmy Brewster Jimmie Crane Al Jacobs | July 27, 1954 #2 on Cash Box chart; #3 on Billboard chart; #4 in U.K. | (with The Mellomen, Frank De Vol's orchestra) (also done by Denise Lor) | |
"If I Had My Life to Live Over" | Larry Vincent Henry Tobias Moe Jaffe | May 25, 1967 | from the album The Love Album | |
"If I Were a Bell" | Frank Loesser | September 28, 1950 TOP 20 HIT | (with George Siravo orchestra) | |
"If You Were the Only Girl" | Nat D. Ayer | Clifford Grey | January 30, 1953 | from the album By the Light of the Silvery Moon |
"If You Will Marry Me" | Roz Gordon | December 15, 1948 | (with Buddy Clark, Mitchell Ayres' orchestra) | |
"I Got Lost in His Arms" | Irving Berlin | October 8, 1962 | from the album Annie Get Your Gun | |
"I Got the Sun in the Morning" | Irving Berlin | March 27, 1946 TOP 10 HIT | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown)Charted at #2 | |
1960 | from the album Show Time | |||
October 8, 1962 | from the album Annie Get Your Gun | |||
"I Hadn't Anyone Till You" | Ray Noble | September 26, 1956 | from the album Day by Day | |
"I Had the Craziest Dream" | Harry Warren | Mack Gordon | November 5, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) |
September 21, 1964 | (medley with "I Don't Want to Walk Without You") from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey | |||
"I Have Dreamed" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | May 5, 1961 | from the album of the same name |
"I Know That You Know" | Vincent Youmans | Anne Caldwell | July 25, 1950 | (duet with Gene Nelson & The Page Cavanaugh Trio) released both as a single and on the album Tea for Two |
"I'll Always Be with You" | Marjorie Goetschius Edna Osser | February 7, 1945 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) | |
"I'll Be Around" | Alec Wilder | May 26, 1950 TOP 20 HIT | (with Axel Stordahl's orchestra) | |
"I'll Be Home for Christmas" | Walter Kent | June 18, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album | |
"I'll Buy That Dream" | Allie Wrubel | Herb Magidson | May 2, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed |
"I'll Forget You" | Ernest R. Ball Annelu Burns | January 30, 1953 | from the album By the Light of the Silvery Moon | |
"I'll Never Slip Around Again" | Floyd Tillman | October 19, 1949 | (as "Doris Day with her Country Cousins") | |
"I'll Never Smile Again" | Ruth Lowe | September 15, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey | |
"I'll Never Stop Loving You" | Nicholas Brodzsky | Sammy Cahn | December 1, 1954 TOP 10 HIT; Oscar-nominated | (with Percy Faith's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Love Me or Leave Me 1,000,000+ sales |
"I'll Remember April" | Gene DePaul | Patricia Johnston Don Raye | October 22, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) |
"I'll See You in My Dreams" | Isham Jones | Gus Kahn | November 13, 1951 TOP 10 ALBUM HIT | (with the Norman Luboff Choir, Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album of the same name |
"I'll String Along with You" | Harry Warren | Al Dubin | December 28, 1948 | (duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo orchestra) |
"I Love Paris" | Cole Porter | February 11, 1960 | from the album Show Time | |
"I Love the Way You Say Goodnight" | George Wyle | Edward Pola | August 21, 1950 TOP 30 HIT | (with the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway |
"Imagination" | Jimmy Van Heusen | Johnny Burke | December 2, 1947 | (with George Siravo orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Day Dreams |
"I'm an Indian Too" | Irving Berlin | October 8, 1962 | from the album Annie Get Your Gun | |
"I May Be Wrong (But I Think You're Wonderful)" | Henry Sullivan | Harry Ruskin | January 25, 1950 | (with Harry James orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Young Man with a Horn |
"I'm Beginning to Miss You" | Irving Berlin | December 29, 1948 | (with John Rarig's orchestra) | |
"I'm Beginning to See the Light" | Duke Ellington Don George Johnny Hodges Harry James | September 21, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey | |
"I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)" | Doc Daugherty Al J. Neiburg Ellis Reynolds | June 17, 1949 | (with John Rarig's orchestra and The Mellomen) released both as a single and on the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams | |
"I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" | John Kellette | "Jaan Kenbrovin" (James Kendis, James Brockman, and Nat Vincent) | March 30, 1951 | (duet with Jack Smith and the Norman Luboff Choir) released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay |
"I'm In Love" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | July 7, 1948 from her first film, ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS | (duet with Buddy Clark) |
"I'm in the Mood for Love" | Jimmy McHugh | Dorothy Fields | 1952 | |
"I'm Not at All in Love" | Jerry Ross | Richard Adler | June 14, 1957 | from the album The Pajama Game |
"I'm Still Sitting under the Apple Tree" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | June 11, 1947 | |
"I'm Sitting on Top of the World" | Ray Henderson | Sam M. Lewis Joe Young | November 29, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers |
"In a Shanty in Old Shanty Town" | Ira Schuster Jack Little | Joe Young | December 8, 1950 | (with the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway |
"The Inch-worm" | Frank Loesser | July 10, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song | |
"I Need Thee Every Hour" | July 11, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone | ||
"In the Garden" | C. Austin Miles | July 12, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone | |
"In the Moon Mist" | Jack Lawrence | January 16, 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) | |
"In the Still of the Night" | Cole Porter | October 22, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) | |
"Instant Love" | M. Drake, Spielman | May 12, 1958 | Single. Frank De Vol and His Orchestra. Instant Love was the B-side to Everybody Loves a Lover | |
"I Only Have Eyes for You" | Harry Warren | Al Dubin | July 14, 1950 | (with Axel Stordahl's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Tea for Two |
"I Remember You" | Victor Schertzinger | Johnny Mercer | September 21, 1956 CONSIDERED DORIS DAY BEST RECORDED SONG | from the album Day by Day |
September 11, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey | |||
"I Said My Pajamas (and Put on My Pray'rs)" | George Wyle | Edward Pola | January 13, 1950 TOP 20 HIT | (with George Wyle orchestra) |
"I See Your Face Before Me" | Arthur Schwartz | Howard Dietz | August 23, 1957 | from the album Day by Night |
"It All Depends on You" | Ray Henderson | Buddy G. DeSylva Lew Brown | December 7, 1954 | from the album Love Me Or Leave Me |
"It Could Happen to You" | Jimmy Van Heusen | Johnny Burke | 1946 TOP 10 HIT | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) |
September 11, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey | |||
"It Had to Be You" | Isham Jones | Gus Kahn | November 9, 1951 | (with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams |
"It Happened at the Festival of Roses" | Al Goodhart (or Goodheart) Dick Manning | September 14, 1949 | (with George Siravo orchestra) | |
"It Might as Well Be Spring" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | October 22, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) |
"It's a Great Feeling" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | May 13, 1949 TOP 30 HIT; Oscar-nominated | (with the Mellomen and John Rarig's orchestra) |
"It's a Lovely Day Today" | Irving Berlin | September 28, 1950 | (with George Siravo orchestra) | |
"It's a Quiet Town in Cross-Bone County" | Harold Spina | Bob Russell | December 29, 1947 | (with The Modernaires) |
"It's Been a Long, Long Time" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | September 15, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey |
"It's Better to Conceal Than Reveal" | Leo Robin | May 15, 1949 | (duet with Dinah Shore, Hugo Winterhalter's orchestra) | |
"It's Easy to Remember" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | October 22, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) |
"It's Magic" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | November 12, 1947 from ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS | (with George Siravo orchestra) 1,000,000+ sales; #2 on Billboard chart, Oscar-nominated |
June 4, 1952 | with Percy Faith and his Orchestra on the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) | |||
"It's the Sentimental Thing to Do" | Marvin Fisher | Roy Alfred | December 2, 1947 | |
"It's You or No One" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | July 7, 1948 from ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS | |
"It Takes Time" | Arthur Korb | February 27, 1947 FIRST RECORDED SINGLE FOR COLUMBIA RECORDS/BACKED WITH "PETE" | ||
"I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm" | Irving Berlin | October 16, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) | |
"I've Grown Accustomed to His Face" | Frederick Loewe | Alan Jay Lerner | February 18, 1960 | from the album Show Time |
"I've Never Been in Love Before" | Frank Loesser | September 13, 1950 TOP 20 HIT | (with David Rose's orchestra) | |
"I've Only Myself to Blame" | Redd Evans Dave Mann | December 2, 1947 | (with George Siravo orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Day Dreams | |
"I Want to Be Happy" | Vincent Youmans | Irving Caesar | July 25, 1950 | (with The Page Cavanaugh Trio) released both as a single and on the album Tea for Two |
December 20, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny | |||
"I Wish I Had a Girl" | Grace Leboy Kahn | Gus Kahn | November 13, 1951 | (with the Norman Luboff Choir) released both as a single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams |
J | ||||
"Julie" | Leith Stevens | Tom Adair | August 10, 1956 TOP 40 HIT/NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARD | title theme from the film of the same name, starring Doris Day and Louis Jourdan |
"Just an Old Love of Mine" | Dave Barbour Peggy Lee | June 11, 1947 | ||
"Just Blew in from the Windy City" | Sammy Fain | Paul Francis Webster | July 16, 1953 | from the album, Calamity Jane |
"Just One Girl" | Lyn Udall | Karl Kennett | February 13, 1953 | with the Norman Luboff Choir from the album By The Light Of The Silvery Moon |
"Just One of Those Things" | Cole Porter | December 4, 1950 | (with the Frank Comstock orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway | |
1954 | from the album Young at Heart | |||
K | ||||
"Keep Smilin', Keep Laughin', Be Happy" | December 23, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny | ||
"King Chanticleer" | Nat D. Ayer | Seymour Brown | January 30, 1953 | with the Norman Luboff Choir from the album By the Light of the Silvery Moon |
L | ||||
"The Lady's in Love with You" | Burton Lane | Frank Loesser | November 13, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers |
"The Lamp Is Low" | Peter de Rose Bert Shefter based on a composition by Maurice Ravel | Mitchell Parish | August 30, 1957 | from the album Day by Night |
"The Last Mile Home" | Walter Kent Walton Farrar | June 24, 1949 | (with John Rarig's orchestra) | |
"The Last Time I Saw You" | Marjorie Goetschius Edna Osser | September 15, 1945 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) | |
"Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | June 18, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album |
"Let Me Call You Sweetheart" | Leo Friedman | Beth Slater Whitson | May 25, 1967 | from the album The Love Album |
"Let No Walls Divide" | Martin Broones | William A. Luce | May 3, 1961 | from the album An All Star Christmas: "We Wish You the Merriest" |
"Let the Little Girl Limbo" | Barry Mann Cynthia Weil | March 11, 1963 NEVER RELEASED | (with Jack Nitzsche's orchestra) not released in US until compiled in a CD album called The 1960s Singles in 2002 | |
"Let's Face the Music and Dance" | Irving Berlin | October 16, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) | |
"Let's Fly Away" | Cole Porter | November 13, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers | |
"Let's Take an Old-Fashioned Walk" | Irving Berlin | May 6, 1949 TOP 20 HIT | (duet with Frank Sinatra, Ken Lane Singers, Axel Stordahl's orchestra) | |
"Let's Take a Walk Around the Block" | Harold Arlen | Ira Gershwin Edgar Yipsel Harburg | November 18, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers |
"Let's Walk That-a-Way" | Kay Twomey Fred Wise Ben Weisman | December 5, 1952 | (duet with Johnnie Ray, Paul Weston's orchestra)#4 hit in U.K. 1953 | |
"Life Is Just a Bowl of Cherries" | Ray Henderson | Buddy G. DeSylva Lew Brown | May 25, 1967 | from the album The Love Album |
"The Lilac Tree" | George H. Gartlan | July 14, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song | |
"Little Girl Blue" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | 1962 | from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo |
"A Little Kiss Goodnight" | Bob Merrill | February 9, 1952 TOP 20 HIT | (duet with Guy Mitchell, Paul Weston's orchestra) | |
"A Load of Hay" | Michael Feahy Howard Barnes Ethelbert Nevin | August 21, 1950 | (with The Page Cavanaugh Trio) | |
"Lollipops and Roses" | Tony Velona | October 29, 1963 | from the album Love Him | |
"The Lord's Prayer" | July 11, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone | ||
"Losing You" | Jean Renard | Carl Sigman | October 29, 1963 | from the album Love Him |
"Love Him" | Barry Mann Cynthia Weil | November 5, 1963 | from the album of the same name | |
"Love Is Here to Stay" | George Gershwin | Ira Gershwin | November 1, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) |
"Love Me in the Daytime" | January 12, 1959; TOP 40 HIT | RELEASED as a single following minor hit on ANYWAY THE WIND BLOWS; | ||
"Love Me or Leave Me" | Walter Donaldson | Gus Kahn | December 7, 1954 Top 20 hit in the U.K.; #1 TOP SELLING LP OF 1955 in U.S. | from the album of the same name |
"Lover Come Back" | Alan Spilton Frank DeVol | November 21, 1961 | (with Frank DeVol's orchestra) | |
"Love Somebody" | Joan Whitney Alex Kramer | November 21, 1947 | (duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo orchestra) 1,000,000+ sales #1 HIT RECORD | |
"Love Ya" | Peter De Rose | Charles Tobias | March 30, 1951 | (duet with Jack Smith, Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay |
"Lullaby of Broadway" | Harry Warren | Al Dubin | December 8, 1950 | (with the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet) from the album of the same name |
December 28, 1950 | (with Harry James and his orchestra) | |||
M | ||||
"Make Someone Happy" | Jule Styne | Adolph Green Betty Comden | December 20, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny with Neal Hefti and His Orchestra |
"Makin' Whoopee!" | Walter Donaldson | Gus Kahn | November 9, 1951 | (duet with Danny Thomas) released both as a single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams |
November 25, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers | |||
"Mama, What'll I Do" | Vaughn Horton | November 30, 1949 | (with Ray Noble's orchestra) | |
"Ma Says, Pa Says" | Josef Marais | October 16, 1952 TOP 20 HIT | (duet with Johnnie Ray, Paul Weston's orchestra) | |
"Mean to Me" | Fred E. Ahlert | Roy Turk | c. December 1954 | from the album Love Me or Leave Me |
"Meditation" | Antônio Carlos Jobim | Portuguese: Newton Mendonça English: Norman Gimbel | November 2, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers |
"Me Too (Ho Ha! Ho Ha!)" | Harry M. Woods | Charles Tobias Al Sherman | November 29, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers |
"Mister Tap Toe" | Terry Gilkyson Richard Dehr Frank Miller | October 16, 1952 TOP 10 HIT on Billboard chart | (with the Norman Luboff Choir and Paul Weston's orchestra) | |
"Mood Indigo" | Duke Ellington Irving Mills Barney Bigard | December 11, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know | |
"Moonglow" | Will Hudson Irving Mills | Eddie De Lange | August 30, 1957 | from the album Day by Night |
"Moonshine Lullaby" | Irving Berlin | October 8, 1962 | from the album Annie Get Your Gun | |
"Moon Song" | Arthur Johnston | Sam Coslow | August 23, 1957 | from the album Day by Night |
"More" | Riz Ortolani Nino Oliviero | Norman Newell | October 29, 1963 | from the album Love Him |
"The More I See You" | Harry Warren | Mack Gordon | September 21, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey |
"Move Over, Darling" | Terry Melcher Hal Kantor Joe Lubin | August 30, 1963 TOP 50 HIT (#8 IN THE UK) | (with Jack Nitsche's orchestra) | |
"My Buddy" | Walter Donaldson | Gus Kahn | November 9, 1951 | (with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams |
"My Darling, My Darling" | Frank Loesser | October 5, 1948 #7 on Billboard chart | (duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo orchestra) biggest-selling version was by Jo Stafford and Gordon MacRae | |
"My Dream Is Yours" | Harry Warren | Ralph Blane | April 19, 1949 TOP 20 HIT | (with George Siravo orchestra) |
"My Dreams Are Getting Better All The Time" | Vic Mizzy | Manny Curtis | April 25, 1945 #1 HIT | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) 1,000,000+ sales |
"My Kinda Love" | Louis Alter | Jo Trent | December 17, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know |
"My Love and Devotion" | Milton Carson | 1952 #10 UK HIT | (with Percy Faith's orchestra) | |
"My Number One Dream Came True" | Les Brown | Bud Green | June 20, 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) |
"My Ship" | Kurt Weill | Ira Gershwin | May 3, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed |
"My One and Only Love" | Guy Wood | Robert Mellin | December 16, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet |
"My Romance" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | 1962 | from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo |
"My Young and Foolish Heart" | Al Lewis Murray Mencher Charles Tobias | February 27, 1947 | ||
N | ||||
"Nearer My God to Thee" | Lowell Mason | Sarah F. Adams | July 11, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone |
"Never Look Back" | Chilton Price | December 4, 1954 | released both as single and on the album Love Me or Leave Me | |
"Nice Work if You Can Get It" | George Gershwin | Ira Gershwin | October 16, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) |
"Night and Day" | Cole Porter | November 19, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) | |
"Night Life" | Willie Nelson Paul Buskirk Walt Breeland | November 5, 1963 | from the album Love Him | |
"The Night We Called it A Day" | Matt Dennis | Tom Adair | August 30, 1957 | from the album Day by Night |
"Nobody's Heart" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | November 30, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet |
"Nobody's Sweetheart" | Elmer Schoebel Billy Meyers | Ernie Erdman Gus Kahn | November 13, 1951 | (with the Norman Luboff Choir) released both as single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams |
"No Two People" | Frank Loesser | August 4, 1952 TOP 20 HIT | (duet with Donald O'Connor, Paul Weston's orchestra) | |
"Not Only Should You Love Him" | Leo Robin | December 22, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know | |
"(Now & Then There's) A Fool Such as I" | Bill Trader | November 5, 1963 | from the album Love Him | |
"(Where Are you ) Now That I Need You" | Frank Loesser | March 23, 1949 TOP 20 HIT | (with The Mellomen) | |
O | ||||
"Oh, But I Do" | Arthur Schwartz | Leo Robin | November 5, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) |
"Oh, How I Miss You Tonight" | Joe Burke Mark Fisher | Benny Davis | June 9, 1967 | from the album The Love Album |
"Ohio" | Leonard Bernstein | Betty Comden Adolph Green | February 18, 1960 | from the album Show Time |
"Oh Me! Oh My! Oh You!" | Vincent Youmans | Ira Gershwin | July 25, 1950 | (duet with Gene Nelson & The Page Cavanaugh Trio) released both as single and on the album Tea for Two |
"Oh What a Beautiful Dream" | Joe Hooven Marilyn Hooven | By Dunham | May 2, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed |
"Once-a-Year Day" | Jerry Ross | Richard Adler | June 14, 1957 | (with John Raitt and Ensemble) from the album The Pajama Game |
"The One I Love (Belongs to Somebody Else)" | Isham Jones | Gus Kahn | November 9, 1951 | (with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams |
"On Moonlight Bay" | Percy Wenrich | Edward Madden | March 23, 1951 | (with the Norman Luboff Choir) released both as a single and on the album of the same name |
"On the Street Where You Live" | Frederick Loewe | Alan Jay Lerner | February 11, 1960 | from the album Show Time |
"On the Sunny Side of the Street" | Jimmy McHugh | Dorothy Fields | December 20, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny |
"Oops" | Harry Warren | Johnny Mercer | September 12, 1951 TOP 40 HIT | (with Paul Weston's orchestra) |
"Oo-Wee Baby" | Barry Mann Cynthia Weil | June 12, 1964 | (with Thomas E. Oliver's orchestra) not released in US until compiled in CD album called The 1960s Singles in 2002 | |
"Orange Colored Sky" | Milton De Lugg William Stein | August 21, 1950 TOP 50 HIT | (with the Page Cavanaugh Trio) | |
"Our Day Will Come" | Mort Garson | Bob Hilliard | November 5, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers |
"Over and Over Again" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | 1962 | from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo |
"Over the Rainbow" | Harold Arlen | E.Y. Harburg | November 5, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) |
P | ||||
"Papa, Won't You Dance with Me?" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | September 3, 1947 TOP 20 HIT; BIG SELLER | (with Lou Bring orchestra) |
"The Party's Over" | Jule Styne | Betty Comden Adolph Green | October 30, 1956 | (with Frank De Vol's orchestra) |
"Pennies from Heaven" | Arthur Johnston | Johnny Burke | November 12, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) |
"People Will Say We're in Love" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | February 25, 1960 | from the album Show Time |
"A Perfect Understanding" | Fred Spielman | Milton Drake | February 7, 1959 | (with Frank DeVol's orchestra) |
"Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps" | Osvaldo Farrés | Spanish: Osvaldo Farrés English: Joe Davis | November 5, 1964 FEATURED IN SEVERAL FILMS IN 2007 2008 AND 2009 | (with Mort Garson's orchestra) from the album Latin for Lovers |
"Periwinkle Blue" | Jerry Livingston | Paul Francis Webster | May 3, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed |
"Pete" | Lanny Grey FIRST SINGLE RELEASE FOR COLUMBIA RECORDS B/W "IT TAKES TIME" | February 27, 1947 | ||
"Pillow Talk" | Buddy Pepper Inez James | July 23, 1959 | (with Jack Marshall's Orchestra) | |
"Please Don't Eat the Daisies" | Joe Lubin | January 7, 1960 | (with Bill Marx's orchestra) | |
"Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone" | Sam H. Stept | Sidney Clare | December 4, 1950 | (with the Frank Comstock orchestra) released both as single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway |
"Por Favor" | Joe Sherman Noël Regney | November 9, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers | |
"Powder Your Face with Sunshine" | Carmen Lombardo Stanley Rochinski | December 28, 1948 | (duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo's orchestra)Top 20 hit in 1949 | |
"Pretty Baby" | Tony Jackson Egbert Van Alstyne | Gus Kahn | November 12, 1947 | (with George Siravo's orchestra) Often erroneously shown w/Harry James as bandleader |
"The Prodigal Son" | July 12, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone | ||
"Pumpernickel" | Sam Coslow | September 5, 1950 | (with Frank Yankovic & his Yanks) | |
"Put 'em in a Box, Tie 'em with a Ribbon" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | November 26, 1947 from ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS | (with George Siravo's orchestra) |
Q | ||||
"Quicksilver" | Irving Taylor George Wyle Eddie Pola | October 19, 1949 | (as "Doris Day with her Country Cousins"); Top 20 Billboard hit | |
"Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars" | Antonio Carlos Jobim | Gene Lees | November 2, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers |
R | ||||
"Rainbow's End" | Denis King John Junkin | May 25, 1964 | (with Jack Nitsche's orchestra) | |
"Ready, Willing and Able" | Floyd Huddleston Dick Gleason Al Rinker | October 8, 1954 | from the album Young at Heart #7 on U.K. charts | |
"A Red Kiss on a Blue Letter" | Redd Evans Roger Genger George Lang | February 7, 1945 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) | |
"Remind Me" | Jerome Kern | Dorothy Fields | November 30, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet |
"Ridin' High" | December 19, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny | ||
"The River Seine" | Guy La Forge | (English) Allan Roberts Alan Holt | September 14, 1949 | (with George Siravo orchestra) |
S | ||||
"Sam, the Old Accordion Man" | Walter Donaldson | December 7, 1954 | from the album Love Me or Leave Me | |
"Save a Little Sunbeam (for a Rainy, Rainy Day)" | Irving Gordon | November 30, 1949 | (with Ray Noble orchestra) | |
"Say Something Nice About Me" | Sam Stept | September 3, 1947 | ||
"Scarlet Ribbons (For Her Hair)" | Evelyn Danzig | Jack Segal | July 12, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone |
"Secret Love" | Sammy Fain | Paul Francis Webster | August 5, 1953 | released both as a single and on the album, Calamity Jane 1,000,000+ sales; charted at #1 in the U.S. and U.K.; Grammy Hall of Fame Award 1999 |
"Send Me No Flowers" | Burt Bacharach | Hal David | September 11, 1964 | (with Mort Garson's orchestra) |
"Sentimental Journey" | Les Brown Ben Homer | Bud Green | November 20, 1944 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) 5,000,000+ sales, #1 on charts |
September 11, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey Grammy Hall of Fame 1998 | |||
"Serenade in Blue" | Harry Warren | Mack Gordon | September 15, 1964 | from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey |
"Seven and a Half Cents" | Jerry Ross | Richard Adler | June 14, 1957 | (with Jack Straw and Ensemble) from the album The Pajama Game |
"Shaking the Blues Away" | Irving Berlin | c. December 1954 | from the album Love Me Or Leave Me | |
"Shanghai" | Milton De Lugg | Bob Hilliard | May 15, 1951 #7 on Billboard chart; #9 on Cash Box chart | (with Norman Luboff Choir, Paul Weston orchestra) |
"Should I Surrender?" | Adam Ross William Landau | November 21, 1961 | (with Frank DeVol's orchestra) | |
"Silver Bells" | Jay Livingston | Ray Evans | September 28, 1950 | (with George Siravo orchestra) |
June 17, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album | |||
"Since I Fell for You" | Buddy Johnson | November 5, 1963 | from the album Love Him | |
"Singin' in the Rain" | Nacio Herb Brown | Arthur Freed | December 20, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny |
"Sleepy Baby" | Martin Broones | Paul Francis Webster | July 7, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song |
"Sleepy Lagoon" | Eric Coates | Jack Lawrence | June 6, 1967 | from the album The Love Album |
"Slightly Out of Tune (Desafinado)" | Antônio Carlos Jobim | Portuguese: Newton Mendonça English: Jon Hendricks Jesse Cavanagh | November 2, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers |
"Small Talk" | Jerry Ross | Richard Adler | June 14, 1957 | (duet with John Raitt) from the album The Pajama Game |
"Snowfall" | Claude Thornhill | Ruth Thornhill | June 17, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album |
"Snuggled on Your Shoulder" | Carmen Lombardo | Joe Young | May 25, 1967 | from the album The Love Album |
"Soft as the Starlight" | Joe Lubin Jerome Howard | August 30, 1957 | from the album Day by Night | |
"Softly, as I Leave You" | Hal Shaper Antonio DeVita Giorgio Calabrese | October 29, 1963 | from the album Love Him | |
"Somebody Loves Me" | George Gershwin | Buddy DeSylva Ballard McDonald | December 4, 1950 | (with the Frank Comstock orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway |
"Someday I'll Find You" | Noël Coward | May 5, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed | |
"Someone Else's Roses" | Howard Barnes, Harold Fields and Joseph Roncoroni (credited as Milton Carson) | December 31, 1947 | (with George Siravo orchestra) from the film My Dream Is Yours | |
"Someone Like You" | Harry Warren | Ralph Blane | December 31, 1947 | (with George Siravo orchestra) from the film My Dream Is Yours |
"Something Wonderful" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | December 22, 1950 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know |
"Sometimes I'm Happy" | Vincent Youmans | Irving Caesar | June 17, 1949 | from the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams |
"The Song is You" | Jerome Kern | Oscar Hammerstein II | September 17, 1956 | from the album Day by Day |
"Soon" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | October 29, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) |
"Sooner or Later" | Charles Wolcott | Ray Gilbert | August 28, 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown)Charted at #13 |
"Sorry" | Gene DePaul | Johnny Mercer | November 4, 1966 | |
"Stardust" | Hoagy Carmichael | Mitchell Parish | 1965 | Unable to locate the original recording date. The song appears on the British import compilation Sentimental Journey, 1965 and the compilation album Love & Magic, 2001 |
"Stars Fell on Alabama" | Frank Perkins | Mitchell Parish | August 27, 1957 | from the album Day by Night |
"Stay on the Right Side, Sister" | Rube Bloom | Ted Koehler | November 18, 1954 | from the album Love Me Or Leave Me |
"Stay with the Happy People" | December 19, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny | ||
"Steppin' Out with My Baby" | Irving Berlin | November 10, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers | |
"Street of Dreams" | Victor Young | Sam M. Lewis | May 25, 1967 | from the album The Love Album |
"Sugarbush" | Josef Marais | February 7, 1952 TOP TEN CHARTED HIT; #1 ON JUKEBOX HITS; #8 in U.K. | (duet with Frankie Laine, with Norman Luboff choir) Based on a traditional Afrikaans song by the name of Suikerbossie 1,000,000+ sales | |
"Summer Has Gone" | Gene DiNovi Bill Comstock | November 2, 1964 | from the album Latin for Lovers | |
"The Surrey With the Fringe on Top" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | February 11, 1960 | from the album Show Time |
"Swinging on a Star" | Jimmy Van Heusen | Johnny Burke | July 10, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song |
T | ||||
"Tacos, Enchiladas and Beans" | November 21, 1947 | |||
"Teacher's Pet" | Joe Lubin | November 1, 1957 TOP 40 HIT | (with Frank De Vol's orchestra) | |
"Tea for Two" | Vincent Youmans | Irving Caesar | July 14, 1950 | (with Axel Stordahl's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Tea for Two ; |
"Tell Me, Tell Me, Dreamface" | Duke Ellington | Don George | February 27, 1947 | |
"Tell Me (Tell Me Why)" | Max Kortlander | J. Will Callahan | March 23, 1951 | (with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay |
"Ten Cents A Dance" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | December 30, 1954 | from the album Love Me Or Leave Me |
"Ten Thousand Four Hundred And Thirty-Two Sheep" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | October 23, 1950 | (with David Rose's orchestra) |
"That Certain Party" | Walter Donaldson | Gus Kahn | October 10, 1948 | (duet with Buddy Clark) |
"That Old Black Magic" | Harold Arlen | Johnny Mercer | November 12, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) |
"That Old Feeling" | Sammy Fain | Lew Brown | December 29, 1948 | from the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams |
"That's the Way He Does It" | Buddy Pepper Inez James | September 3, 1947 | (with Lou Bring orchestra) | |
"There Once Was a Man" | Jerry Ross | Richard Adler | June 14, 1957 | (duet with John Raitt) from the album The Pajama Game |
"There's A Rising Moon" | Sammy Fain | Paul Francis Webster | September 24, 1954 | from the album Young at Heart |
"There's Good Blues Tonight" | Edna Osser Glenn Osser | February 25, 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) | |
"There's No Business Like Show Business" | Irving Berlin | 1962 Also recorded in 1948 with Frank Sinatra as a duet | (duet with Robert Goulet, Franz Allers Orchestra) from the album Annie Get Your Gun | |
"There They Are" | Carter Wright Donald Borzage | Paul Francis Webster | January 21, 1946 | (with Mort Garson's orchestra) |
"There Will Never Be Another You" | Harry Warren | Mack Gordon | September 26, 1956 | from the album Day by Day |
"They Say It's Wonderful" | Irving Berlin | February 18, 1960 | from the album Show Time | |
October 8, 1962 | (duet with Robert Goulet) from the album Annie Get Your Gun | |||
"This Can't Be Love" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | 1962 | from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo |
"Thoughtless" | Carl Lampl | Buddy Kaye | December 29, 1947 | (with The Modernaires) |
"Three Coins in the Fountain" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | October 22, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) |
"Till the End of Time" | Buddy Kaye Ted Mossman | May 17, 1945 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) #3 charted hit | |
"Till We Meet Again" | Richard Whiting | Raymond B. Egan | March 23, 1951 | released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay |
"Till My Love Comes to Me" | Based on Mendelssohn's "On Wings of Song" | Paul Francis Webster | September 24, 1954 | from the album Young at Heart |
"Time to Say Goodnight" | John Rotella | May 2, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed | |
"'Tis Harry I'm Plannin' to Marry" | Sammy Fain | Paul Francis Webster | July 16, 1953 | from the album, Calamity Jane |
"Too Marvelous For Words" | Richard A. Whiting | Johnny Mercer | January 25, 1950 | (with Harry James Quintet) released both as a single and on the album Young Man with a Horn |
"Toyland" | Victor Herbert | Glen McDonough | June 16, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album |
"Twinkle and Shine" | December 23, 1960 | from the album Bright and Shiny | ||
"Twinkle Lullaby" | Joe Lubin | August 30, 1963 | (with Jack Nitsche's orchestra) | |
U | ||||
"Under a Blanket of Blue" | Jerry Livingston | Al J. Neiburg Marty Symes | August 23, 1957 | from the album Day by Night |
V | ||||
"Very Good Advice" | Sammy Fain | Bob Hilliard | February 28, 1951 | (with the Four Hits and Leith Stevens's orchestra) |
"A Very Precious Love" | Sammy Fain | Paul Francis Webster | November 19, 1957 | (with Frank De Vol's orchestra) Charted at #16 in U.K., 1958 |
"The Very Thought Of You" | Ray Noble | January 25, 1950 | (with Harry James and his orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Young Man with a Horn | |
W | ||||
"Wait Till You See Him" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | December 16, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet |
"Walk with Him" | July 11, 1962 | from the album You'll Never Walk Alone | ||
"The Way You Look Tonight" | Jerome Kern | Dorothy Fields | November 12, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1) |
"We'll Be Together Again" | Carl T. Fischer | Frankie Laine | November 5, 1945 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) |
"We'll Love Again" | Jay Livingston | Ray Evans | May 3, 1961 Also featured in the film, THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH (February 24, 1956) | from the album I Have Dreamed |
"What Does a Woman Do?" | Allie Wrubel | Maxwell Anderson | December 22, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know |
January 7, 1960 | (with Bill Marx's orchestra) | |||
"Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera)" | Jay Livingston | Ray Evans | February 24, 1956 | (with Frank De Vol's orchestra) 1,000,000+ sales; charted at #1 in the U.K., Australia & France, and #2 in the U.S.; Grammy Hall of Fame 2012 |
July 7, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song | |||
"What Every Girl Should Know" | David Holt | Robert Wells | December 11, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album of the same name |
"What's the Use of Wond'rin'?" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | December 11, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know |
"When I Fall in Love" | Victor Young | Edward Heyman | May 6, 1952 TOP 10 HIT | (with Norman Luboff choir, Percy Faith orchestra) |
"When I Grow Too Old to Dream" | Sigmund Romberg | Oscar Hammerstein II | May 5, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed |
"When I'm Not Near the Boy I Love" | Burton Lane | E.Y. Harburg | February 11, 1960 | from the album Show Time |
"When the Red, Red Robin (Comes Bob, Bob, Bobbin' Along)" | Harry M. Woods | 1953/4 | from the album, The Voice of Your Choice. With Paul Weston and His Orchestra | |
"When You're Smiling" | Larry Shay Mark Fisher | Joe Goodwin | December 17, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know |
"When Your Lover Has Gone" | December 29, 1948 | from the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams | ||
"White Christmas" | Irving Berlin) | June 17, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album | |
"Who Are We to Say (Obey Your Heart)" | Sigmund Romberg | Gus Kahn | December 16, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet |
"Who Knows What Might Have Been?" | Jule Styne | Adolph Green Betty Comden | November 21, 1961 | (with Frank DeVol's orchestra) |
"The Whole World Is Singing My Song" | Vic Mizzy | Manny Curtis | June 20, 1946 TOP 20 HIT | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown)Charted at #6 |
"Why Can't I?" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | 1962 | (with Martha Raye) from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo |
"Why Don't We Do this More Often?" | Allie Wrubel | Charles Newman | November 13, 1958 | from the album Cuttin' Capers |
"Winter Wonderland" | Felix Bernard | Richard B. Smith | June 16, 1964 | from The Doris Day Christmas Album |
"With a Smile and a Song" | Frank Churchill | Larry Morey | July 7, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album of the same name |
"With a Song in My Heart" | Richard Rodgers | Lorenz Hart | January 27, 1950 from Top Ten Albums of 1950 | (with Harry James Quintet) released both as a single and on the album Young Man with a Horn |
"A Woman's Touch" | July 17, 1953 | from the album, Calamity Jane | ||
"A Wonderful Guy" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | February 18, 1960 | from the album Show Time |
"Wonderful One" | Ferde Grofé Paul Whiteman | Theodora Morse) | June 9, 1967 | from the album The Love Album |
"Would I Love You, Love You, Love You" | Harold Spina | Bob Russell | December 28, 1950 TOP 10 Billboard Hit | (with Harry James and his orchestra) |
"Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams (And Dream Your Troubles Away)" | Harry Barris | Billy Moll Ted Koehler | August 27, 1957 | from the album Day by Night |
Y | ||||
"Yes" | André Previn | Dory Langdon Previn | November 30, 1961 | (with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet |
"You Are My Sunshine" | Jimmie Davis Charles Mitchell Paul Rice | September 5, 1950 | (with Frank Yankovic & his Yanks) | |
"You Can Have Him" | Irving Berlin | May 15, 1949 | (duet with Dinah Shore, Hugo Winterhalter's orchestra) | |
"You Can't Get A Man with A Gun" | Irving Berlin | October 8, 1962 | from the album Annie Get Your Gun | |
"You Can't Have Everything" | Harry Revel | Mack Gordon | December 17, 1959 | (with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know |
"You Do Something to Me" | Cole Porter | August 27, 1957 | from the album Day by Night | |
"You Go to My Head" | J. Fred Coots | Haven Gillespie | March 2, 1949 | (with George Siravo orchestra) released both as a single and on the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams |
"You'll Never Know" | Harry Warren | Mack Gordon | November 5, 1957 | from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2) |
"You'll Never Walk Alone" | Richard Rodgers | Oscar Hammerstein II | July 13, 1962 | from the album of the same name |
"You Love Me" | Jule Styne | Sammy Cahn | September 13, 1950 | (with David Rose's orchestra) |
"You Made Me Love You (I Didn't Want To Do It)" | James V. Monaco | Joseph McCarthy | November 18, 1954 | from the album Love Me Or Leave Me |
"You My Love" | Jimmy Van Heusen | Mack Gordon | September 24, 1954 | from the album Young at Heart |
"You're Getting to Be a Habit with Me" | Harry Warren | Al Dubin | December 4, 1950 | (with the Frank Comstock orchestra) released both as single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway |
"You're My Thrill" | Jay Gorney | Sidney Clare | May 13, 1949 | (with The Mellomen) released both as single and on the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams |
"Your Eyes Have Told Me So" | Walter Blaufuss | Gustave Kahn Egbert Van Alstyne | February 13, 1953 | from the album By The Light Of The Silvery Moon |
"You Should Have Told Me" | Bobby Barnes Lewis Bellin Redd Evans | August 29, 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) | |
"You Stepped Out of a Dream" | Nacio Herb Brown | Gus Kahn | May 5, 1961 | from the album I Have Dreamed |
"You Was" | Sonny Burke | Paul Francis Webster | December 15, 1948 | (duet with Buddy Clark, Mitchell Ayres orchestra) |
"You Won't Be Satisfied (Until You Break My Heart)" | Teddy Powell Larry Stock | November 5, 1945 #4 HIT OF 1946 | (with Les Brown's Band of Renown) | |
Z | ||||
"Zip-a-dee-doo-dah" | Allie Wrubel | Ray Gilbert | July 10, 1964 | (with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song |
"Secret Love" is a song composed by Sammy Fain (music) and Paul Francis Webster (lyrics) for Calamity Jane, a 1953 musical film in which it was introduced by Doris Day in the title role. Ranked as a number 1 hit for Day on both the Billboard and Cash Box, the song also afforded Day a number 1 hit in the UK. "Secret Love" has subsequently been recorded by a wide range of artists, becoming a C&W hit firstly for Slim Whitman and later for Freddy Fender, with the song also becoming an R&B hit for Billy Stewart, whose version also reached the top 40 as did Freddy Fender's. In the UK, "Secret Love" would become the career record of Kathy Kirby via her 1963 remake of the song. The melody bears a slight resemblance to the opening theme of Schubert's A-major piano sonata, D.664.
"If I Give My Heart to You" is a popular song written by Jimmy Brewster, Jimmie Crane, and Al Jacobs. The most popular versions of the song were recorded by Doris Day and by Denise Lor; both charted in 1954.
"Again" is a popular song with music by Lionel Newman and words by Dorcas Cochran. It first appeared in the film Road House (1948), sung by Ida Lupino. An instrumental rendition was used in the movie Pickup on South Street (1953). By 1949, versions by Vic Damone, Doris Day, Tommy Dorsey, Gordon Jenkins, Vera Lynn, Art Mooney, and Mel Tormé all made the Billboard charts.
"My Darling, My Darling" is a popular song, written by Frank Loesser and published in 1948. It was originally introduced by Byron Palmer and Doretta Morrow in the Broadway musical Where's Charley? (1948).
"The Way We Were" is a song by American singer Barbra Streisand from her fifteenth studio album of the same name. It was released as the album's lead single on September 27, 1973, through Columbia Records. The 7" single was distributed in two different formats, with the standard edition featuring B-side track "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?"; the Mexico release instead included an instrumental B-side. The song was written by Alan Bergman, Marilyn Bergman, and Marvin Hamlisch, while production was solely handled by Marty Paich. "The Way We Were" was specifically produced for the record, in addition to three other tracks, including her then-upcoming single "All in Love Is Fair" (1974).
"By The Light of the Silvery Moon" or "By the Light of the Silv'ry Moon" is a popular love song. The music was written by Gus Edwards, and the lyrics by Edward Madden. The song was published in 1909 and first performed on stage by Lillian Lorraine in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1909. It was one of a series of moon-related Tin Pan Alley songs of the era. The song was also used in the short-lived Broadway show Miss Innocence when it was sung by Frances Farr.
Calamity Jane was the name of a 10" LP album, released by Columbia Records on November 9, 1953, of songs sung by Doris Day and Howard Keel from the movie of the same name. In the UK, the album was also released as a 10" minigroove album by Philips Records, catalogue number BBR8104.
"Don't Take Your Love from Me" is a popular song written by Henry Nemo and published in 1941. Mildred Bailey first recorded this song in 1940 before publication. It was introduced that year by singer Joan Brooks.
"This Can't Be Love" is a show tune and a popular song from the 1938 Rodgers and Hart musical The Boys from Syracuse when it was sung by Eddie Albert and Marcy Westcott. The lyrics poke fun at the common depiction of love in popular songs as a host of malignant symptoms, saying, "This can't be love because I feel so well."
"I Had the Craziest Dream" is a popular song which was published in 1942. The music was written by Harry Warren, the lyrics by Mack Gordon.
"The Party's Over" is a popular song composed by Jule Styne with lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green. It was introduced in the 1956 musical comedy play Bells Are Ringing by Judy Holliday. For the movie version (1960), Judy Holliday again performed the song.
"Nobody's Sweetheart", also known as "Nobody's Sweetheart Now" and "You're Nobody's Sweetheart Now", is a popular song, written in 1924, with music by Billy Meyers and Elmer Schoebel, and lyrics by Gus Kahn and Ernie Erdman. The song is a jazz and pop standard.
"The Best Thing for You (Would Be Me)" is a popular song written by Irving Berlin and published in 1950. It was featured in the 1950 Broadway musical play, Call Me Madam, in which it was introduced by Ethel Merman in a scene with Paul Lukas. The 1953 film version also featured the song when it was sung by Ethel Merman and George Sanders.
"Here in My Arms" is a popular song published in 1925, written by Richard Rodgers with lyrics by Lorenz Hart.
Gotham Records was an American record label formed by Sam Goode (Goody) and Ivin Ballen in New York City in 1946. In January 1948 Ballen acquired the interest of Goode and became the sole owner. He then moved the company to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where the label was based for the rest of its existence until 1956. The label specialized in rhythm and blues. Ivin Ballen died in Miami Beach, Florida, in February 1978.
"Love Her" is a song written by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil which was first a song for the American singing duo the Everly Brothers in 1963 as the B-side to "The Girl Sang the Blues" and was later recorded and released by the American pop group the Walker Brothers as their second single in 1965. Doris Day released a lyrical variation entitled "Love Him" for her 1963 album of the same name.
"When the Lights Are Out" is a song by the British rock band Slade, released in 1974 as the fourth and final single from their fourth studio album Old New Borrowed and Blue. The single was released in America and Belgium only. The song was written by lead vocalist Noddy Holder and bassist Jim Lea, and produced by Chas Chandler.
The Dummies was a musical project formed by Slade bassist Jim Lea and his brother Frank Lea in 1979. Between 1979 and 1981, they released three singles and recorded a number of original and Slade songs, which were collected on the 1992 album A Day in the Life of the Dummies.
"Maria Ninguém" is a song written by Carlos Lyra and first released by Brazilian bossa nova singer João Gilberto on his album Chega de Saudade in April 1959. It has been covered by numerous artists, most notably by Cliff Richard, who sang a Spanish-language version titled "Maria No Mas".
"Choo Choo Train (Ch-Ch-Foo)" is a song written by Jack Lawrence and Marc Fontenoy and performed by Doris Day featuring Paul Weston and His Orchestra. In 1953, the track reached No. 20 on the U.S. chart.