Connie Francis - Connie Francis At The Copa (Live At The Copacabana/1961) (2021)

  • 21 May, 14:27
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Artist:
Title: Connie Francis At The Copa (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
Year Of Release: 1961/2021
Label: Polydor
Genre: Pop
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:31:36
Total Size: 73 mb | 178 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Connie Francis - Ol' Man Mose (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
02. Connie Francis - It All Depends On You (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
03. Connie Francis - Many Tears Ago (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
04. Connie Francis - You Always Hurt The One You Love (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
05. Connie Francis - Shein Vi De Levone/Dance Everyone Dance (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
06. Connie Francis - Jealous Of You (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
07. Connie Francis - Mama (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
08. Connie Francis - Smack Dab In The Middle (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
09. Connie Francis - You Made Me Love You/Swanee/Rock A Bye Your Baby With A Dixie Melody/My Mammy/Toot Toot Tootsie (Live At The Copacabana/1961)
10. Connie Francis - When The Saints Go Marching In/Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home (Live At The Copacabana/1961)

Connie Francis at the Copa is a decent document of the immortal pop singer performing live in New York City with an orchestra conducted by Joe Mele. The ten selections include a five-song Al Jolson medley and a coupling of "When the Saints Come Marching In" with "Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home" putting the emphasis on standards more than her hits. Two Top Ten gold singles from 1960 are here, though: Connie's remake of the 1940s Italian composition "Mama" and a song more representative of her pop hits, "Many Tears Ago."

The sound quality for a major release on MGM is shockingly low, on the level of a good bootleg. Mickey Deans' cassette recordings of his wife, and Judy Garland's last performance, which became the Judy. London. 1969. LP, are similar to this allegedly "High Fidelity Recording" though that album emerged out of necessity and this was produced by a major film/record company. But the singer is great at the top of her game, recorded a year after she debuted her album of Italian songs in 1960 on The Perry Como Show. The liner notes contain nine reviews from critics, Frank Farrell of the World-Telegram and Sun calling this a "...sensational supper club bow as a major star." Connie Francis at the Copa casts the singer in a different light. Somewhat removed from her popular radio material, she proves she has the talent to take virtually any material and hit it out of the park.