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  1. "You're the Top" is a Cole Porter song from the 1934 musical Anything Goes. It is about a man and a woman who take turns complimenting each other. The best-selling version was Paul Whiteman's Victor single, which made the top five. It was the most popular song from Anything Goes at the time, with hundreds of parodies.

    • 1934
  2. 1930-1934 Libby. The New Yorkers (1930) conducted 1. I’m Getting Myself Ready for You Emil Coleman and his Orchestra 2 . 2. Where Have You Been? Teddi King, with orchestra directed by George Siravo1 . 3. Let’s Fly Away . Lee Wiley, with Bunny Berigan's Music7 . 4.1 Happen to Like New York . Judy Garland, with orchestra and chorus directed ...

  3. Dec 7, 2006 · Details. Select delivery location. Used: Very Good | Details. Sold by WonderBook. Used (9) from. $1596 & FREE Shipping. You're The Top: Cole Porter In The 1930s - Cole Porter Centennial Collection. Cole Porter Format: Audio CD. 4.3 11 ratings. $1596. See all 4 formats and editions. Audio CD. $15.96 9 Used from $13.74. Track Listings. Disc: 1.

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  5. One of the most striking things about the success of “Anything Goes” and “You’re the Top” is that it occurred in 1934 at the height of the worst economic depression America had ever faced. In 1933, the unemployment rate reached a record of 24.9%, and it remained above 14% for nine years from 1931-1940.

  6. AllMusic Rating. User Rating (0) Your Rating. STREAM OR BUY: Release Date. 1992. Duration. 01:06:37. Genre. Stage & Screen, Vocal. Styles. Tin Pan Alley Pop, Cast Recordings, Show Tunes. Discography Timeline. See Full Discography. High Society (1956) Oscar Peterson Plays the Cole Porter Song Book (1959) The Columbia Album of Cole Porter (1983)

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  7. Year. 2 versions. Add to Wantlist. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for You're The Top: Cole Porter In The 1930s (Disc One) by Cole Porter. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.

  8. A great list song, a chic ‘30s souvenir, and a snapshot of an era, Cole Porters “You’re the Top” is all of these things. And, yet, for all its era-specific, now abstruse references, “You’re the Top” remains remarkably timeless, still catchy and satisfying, still sing-able, a testament to great