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Julie London|Swing Me An Old Song

Swing Me An Old Song

Julie London

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Everyone seems to have forgotten that rock & roll wasn't doing so hot with white audiences at the tail end of the 1950s until the Beatles hit the scene and had everyone going electric again. Instead of rockabilly, folk music and Dixieland jazz were huge in 1959 and young audiences were getting into old-time songs that their parents and grandparents knew. Swing Me an Old Song was Julie London's Dixieland-spiced folk revival effort. If it doesn't actually play to her strengths to be cast as a sexed-up version of Burl Ives, it takes some kind of real talent to be able to coo such hoary chestnuts as "Camptown Races" and "Row, Row, Row, Your Boat" without embarrassing yourself too much. Thankfully, the song selection on most of the album is better than these two egregious examples of stale singalongs that should never have made it outside of summer camp. Tracks like "Cuddle up a Little Closer" and "Darktown Strutters Ball" fit London like a satin glove, as does her downbeat take on "Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home" (though she would cut an even better version of this on her 1966 release For the Night People). During the same year as Swing Me an Old Song, London also cut the cool jazz album Julie...at Home (which may just be her single finest work) and Your Number Please..., a swank orchestral set of standards. People often mention Julie London's limited vocal range, but it's surprising how far that her talent could stretch.

© Nick Dedina /TiVo

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Swing Me An Old Song

Julie London

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1
Comin' Thru The Rye
00:02:35

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

2
Cuddle Up A Little Closer
00:02:09

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

3
After The Ball
00:02:43

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

4
Be My Little Bumble Bee
00:03:25

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

5
Camptown Races
00:03:22

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

6
Old Folks At Home
00:02:43

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

7
Downtown Strutters' Ball
00:02:31

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

8
How Come You Do Me Like You Do
00:02:30

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

9
Row, Row, Row
00:02:21

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

10
By The Beautiful Sea
00:02:14

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

11
Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home
00:01:49

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

12
Three O'Clock In The Morning
00:03:15

Julie London, MainArtist

2000 CoolNote 2000 CoolNote

Chronique

Everyone seems to have forgotten that rock & roll wasn't doing so hot with white audiences at the tail end of the 1950s until the Beatles hit the scene and had everyone going electric again. Instead of rockabilly, folk music and Dixieland jazz were huge in 1959 and young audiences were getting into old-time songs that their parents and grandparents knew. Swing Me an Old Song was Julie London's Dixieland-spiced folk revival effort. If it doesn't actually play to her strengths to be cast as a sexed-up version of Burl Ives, it takes some kind of real talent to be able to coo such hoary chestnuts as "Camptown Races" and "Row, Row, Row, Your Boat" without embarrassing yourself too much. Thankfully, the song selection on most of the album is better than these two egregious examples of stale singalongs that should never have made it outside of summer camp. Tracks like "Cuddle up a Little Closer" and "Darktown Strutters Ball" fit London like a satin glove, as does her downbeat take on "Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home" (though she would cut an even better version of this on her 1966 release For the Night People). During the same year as Swing Me an Old Song, London also cut the cool jazz album Julie...at Home (which may just be her single finest work) and Your Number Please..., a swank orchestral set of standards. People often mention Julie London's limited vocal range, but it's surprising how far that her talent could stretch.

© Nick Dedina /TiVo

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