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  1. Jul 1, 2005 · Julie London has 36 albums from 1969 to 2010 including Julie Is Her Name Complete Sessions, and The Very Best of Julie London.

  2. Oct 18, 2000 · Explore Julie London's discography including top tracks, albums, and reviews. Learn all about Julie London on AllMusic.

    • Yummy, Yummy, Yummy
    • In Person at The Americana
    • With Body & Soul
    • Whatever Julie Wants
    • The End of The World
    • Send For Me
    • Calendar Girl
    • For The Night People
    • Around Midnight
    • Lonely Girl

    A sign of the changing times, in her final studio album London ditches Gershwin and Porter for ... the Beatles, the Doors, and Spanky and Our Gang. An ill-conceived career pivot, Yummy, Yummy, Yummyfinds London trying to make soft rock songs her own and it just doesn't work. The songs, which include "Mighty Quinn" and "Light My Fire" have been give...

    The only live album on this list, it's interesting for that reason alone. Listening to it gave me a better of what she was famous for, like when she starts singing "Cry Me A River" and a guy starts clapping. I guess that was still far and away her biggest hit, even though it'd been almost a decade since that song was released. A few times, the chor...

    Late-career London that sees her pulling material from a wide variety of sources. She does everything from "You're No Good" to "Alexander's Ragtime Band." But unlike other attempts to leave her pop standards wheelhouse, she succeeds in this record at creating sonic cohesion between the tracks. There's a jazzy, soulful current running through this a...

    An album themed around a woman treating sex as a commodity. Seriously. The album cover finds London wearing a fur coat (and apparently nothing else) while surrounded by diamonds, champagne, and cash. The songs position her mostly as a vamp, cooing such numbers as "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" and "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend". London has always...

    At this point of her career, London slides into a an easy listening/adult contemporary mode that kind of anticipates a lot of what's to come in the next couple of decades for those genres. She doesn't stick with it, but she made two enjoyable, if light, albums of it. Best Song: This is the best version of "Fly Me to the Moon," if we're being honest...

    There's so much going on here, which is rare for a London album. The arrangement sounds really good, but they just don't sound like they're for a Julie London album. There are background singers! It's not bad, not bad at all, just odd. Best Song: "What's Your Story, Morning Glory" probably does the best job of incorporating London's vocal style wit...

    Calling it a theme would. be generous, this album has a straight up gimmick. Every song is about a different month, going through the year in chronological order. And the album cover, accordingly, features many shots of London posing with a variety of seasonal objects. While she sounds well enough, the small jazz combo from her previous recordings ...

    Aren't all of her albums for the night people? After her bigger, orchestral pop albums of the early '60s, London returns to what she's best at with this stripped-down, jazzy album. Don Bagely's arrangements never overwhelm her voice, and there are several great moments of guitar. She had previously recorder "Won't You Come Home, Bill Bailey" on Swi...

    London works with a large orchestra again on this album, and it proves to be very successful choice. This is the epitome of a nighttime album, with that sleepy, woozy vibe going right through it. Songs like "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning" were appropriate choices. Best Song: Toss up between the title track and "You and the Night and the Mus...

    The lore about London's second album (I don't how true this is) is that it was largely improvised, recorded by London and guitarist Al Viola when she was struggling to record the vocals for the highly orchestrated follow-up album that the label wanted her to make. Thankfully, this album happened and was released before the bland, gimmicky Calendar ...

  3. She went on to record many albums, beginning in 1955 with Julie Is Her Name and ending in 1965 with By Myself, not including several compilation albums released before and after her death.

  4. Apr 11, 2024 · The discography of American jazz singer Julie London consists of 29 studio albums, one live album, six compilation albums, two additional albums, and 29 singles. After a moderately successful film career, London signed a recording contract with the newly formed Liberty Records in 1955.

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  7. Jun 28, 2020 · Her sultry, smouldering voice, best known for ‘Cry Me A River’, the torch song that launched her, is heard on over 30 albums released between 1955 and 1969. She was a true jazz artist, working...