Little Girl Blue/Little Girl New | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1963 | |||
Recorded | 1963 | |||
Genre | Traditional pop, jazz | |||
Length | 40:35 | |||
Label | Reprise R 6086 | |||
Keely Smith chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
New Record Mirror | [1] |
Little Girl Blue/Little Girl New is a 1963 album by Keely Smith, with arrangements by Nelson Riddle. The album was Smith's first for Reprise Records, which was founded by Smith's friend and mentor, Frank Sinatra. [2] [3]
The initial Billboard magazine review from June 29, 1963 awarded the album their 'Pop Special Merit Pick' for that week and commented that "She generates lots of excitement whether it's an up-tempo ditty like "A Lot of Livin' to Do" or a more relaxed "Gone with the Wind"...Nelson Riddle contributes highly effective support". [4]
The album was reviewed by Matt Collar for Allmusic who wrote that "tour de force of an album that presented Smith as the solo star she deserved to be" and described Smith as "an urbanely sophisticated hipster and a clarion diva in the mold of such similarly inclined contemporaries as June Christy, Anita O'Day, and Kay Starr". Collar praised her "...yearning take on "Here's That Rainy Day" and her languorously sensual reading of "I'll Never Be the Same Again"" and concluded that "Ultimately, listening to Smith and her pointed yet dusky, golden-toned voice pouring out of Riddle's shimmering, sky-blue arrangements, one can easily see why Sinatra jumped at the chance to work with her". [3]
Nelson Smock Riddle Jr. was an American arranger, composer, bandleader and orchestrator whose career stretched from the late 1940s to the mid-1980s. He worked with many vocalists at Capitol Records, including Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Nat King Cole, Judy Garland, Dean Martin, Peggy Lee, Johnny Mathis, Rosemary Clooney and Keely Smith. He scored and arranged music for many films and television shows, earning an Academy Award and three Grammy Awards. He found commercial and critical success with a new generation in the 1980s, in a trio of Platinum albums with Linda Ronstadt.
Dorothy Jacqueline Keely, professionally known as Keely Smith, was an American jazz and popular music singer, who performed and recorded extensively in the 1950s with then-husband Louis Prima, and throughout the 1960s as a solo artist.
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