1949 Dinah Shore - Always True To You In My Fashion

  • el año pasado
Dinah Shore Frances Rose Shore (Winchester, March 1, 1917 - Beverly Hills, February 24, 1994), known as Dinah Shore, was an American jazz and popular music singer. Forged in the big bands of the 1930s, Dinah became one of the most popular artists in the United States in the 1940s thanks to her interpretation of numerous musical hits, such as "Buttons and Bows", "The Gypsy" and "I ´ll Walk Alone", and in successive years thanks to his appearance in several television programs. Born in rural Tennessee, Dinah Shore worked in Nashville radio as a teenager. Her professional career began later in New York where she sang with Xavier Cugat. After unsuccessful auditions to work with Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey, she decided to become an individual singer. Signed to Bluebird in 1940-1941, she recorded several hits, including "Yes, My Darling Daughter," "I Hear a Rhapsody," and "Jim." In 1942 she sold a million copies of the song "Blues in the Night". She then signed with the RCA Victor company and achieved another great success with "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To" and, above all, in 1944 with "I'll Walk Alone". She also worked in some films, such as in 1944 in Up in Arms and in 1946 in Till the Clouds Roll By. Between 1946 and 1949 songs such as "The Gypsy", "I Love You for Sentimental Reasons", "Anniversary Song", "I Wish I Didn´t Love You So", "Buttons and Bows" and "Dear Hearts and Gentle People" stand out. ". In the fifties she was famous more than for her music for her variety television show The Dinah Shore Chevy Show, a medium in which she would work irregularly until the eighties. She died of cancer.

Recomendada