
ABOUT
THE DISC & RECORDINGS:
This is
an amazing boxed set of Garland performances. The only set
to encompass her entire life via songs from the very first
known recordings of her voice through January 1969, just months
before her death.
As an added bonus there is a wonderful 32-minute video of performances
from her T.V. series, and a beautiful 102-page booklet with
130 photographs. The booklet features the following essays:
"A Jazz-Eye View of Judy," by Will Friedwald
"Aretha on Judy," David Ritz interviews Aretha Franklin
"Judy Garland as a Force of Nature," by Camille Paglia
"A Conversation with Mort Lindsey," Joel Dorn interviews Mort Lindsey
"Garlands for Judy," by Scott Schechter
The History of My Life Is in My Songs (detailed background info in the track
listings),
by
Scott Schechter
Although it's not being produced anymore, this set can be found on eBay and other
website. It's worth the time and effort to find it and to purchase it.
All images on this page from the collection of Scott Brogan.
CLICK HERE TO JUMP TO REVIEWS OF THIS SET.
[December 20, 2007] Joel Dorn (April 7, 1942 - December 17, 2007), producer
of this wonderful boxed set has passed away. Click
here for more info.
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TRACK
LISTING
Song
Title |
Source |
Time |
Disc
1
|
The
History Of My Life Is In My Songs |
Excerpt
from 08-28-1960 "Judy At The Palace" recording
for the Capitol Records album "Judy In
London" |
0:42 |
Blue
Butterfly |
1929
First National/Vitaphone short A Holiday In Storyland |
0:49 |
Hang
Onto A Rainbow |
1929
First National/Vitaphone short The Wedding Of Jack
and Jill |
1:04 |
When
The Butterflies Kiss The Buttercups Goodbye (The Gumm
Sisters harmony) |
1929
First National/Vitaphone short A Holiday In Storyland |
1:14 |
The
Land Of Let's Pretend (The Gumm
Sisters harmony) |
1930
First National/Vitaphone short Bubbles |
2:51 |
Introduction
by Wallace Berry |
|
0:48 |
Zing!
Went The Strings Of My Heart |
11-16-1935
appearance on the "Shell Chateau Hour" radio show |
3:31 |
Stompin'
At The Savoy |
06-12-1936
Decca Records recording |
2:22 |
Everybody
Sing |
08-30-1937
Decca Records recording |
2:51 |
(Dear
Mr. Gable) You Made Me Love You |
09-24-1937
Decca Records recording |
3:09 |
I'm
Feelin' Like A Million |
Circa
Summer 1937 rehearsal recording |
2:50 |
Over
The Rainbow (with Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg) |
06-29-1939
"Maxwell House Coffee Time" radio show |
2:51 |
Over
The Rainbow |
10-07-1938
MGM soundtrack recording for The Wizard Of Oz (1939) |
2:14 |
All
The Things You Are |
02-13-1940
"Pepsodent Show Starring Bob Hope" radio show |
3:00 |
I'm
Nobody's Baby |
04-10-1940
Decca Records recording |
2:53 |
For
Me And My Gal (with Gene Kelly) |
07-26-1942
Decca Records recording |
2:29 |
The
Trolley Song |
04-21-1944
Decca Records recording |
2:49 |
Liza |
11-12-1946
"Philco Radio Time's Bing Crosby Show" radio show |
3:34 |
I've
Got You Under My Skin |
02-19-1947
"Philco Radio Time's Bing Crosby Show" radio show |
3:10 |
Over
The Rainbow (with Al Jolson and Oscar Levant) |
09-30-1948
"The Kraft Music Hall Starring Al Jolson" radio show |
0:48 |
Disc
2
|
Get
Happy |
03-15-1950
MGM soundtrack recording for Summer Stock (1950) |
2:46 |
The
Man That Got Away |
09-04-1953
Warner Bros. soundtrack recording for A Star Is Born (1954) |
4:20 |
Swanee |
June
1954 Warner Bros. soundtrack recording for A
Star Is Born (1954) |
1:35 |
Danny
Boy |
08-30-1955
recording for the Capitol Records album "Miss
Show Business" |
2:24 |
Come
Rain Or Come Shine |
03-31-1956
recording for the Capitol Records album "Judy" |
3:40 |
How
About me |
02-05-1957
recording for the Capitol Records album "Alone" |
3:37 |
Me
And My Shadow |
02-05-1957
recording for the Capitol Records album "Alone" |
3:37 |
Zing!
Went The Strings Of My Heart |
05-19-1958
recording for the Capitol Records album "Judy
In Love" |
3:45 |
Who
Cares (As Long As You Care For Me) |
06-09-1960
recording for the Capitol Records album "Judy!
That's Entertainment" |
1:27 |
You'll
Never Walk Alone |
08-28-1960
recording for the Capitol Records album "Judy In
London" |
4:01 |
Happiness
Is A Thing Called Joe |
08-28-1960
recording for the Capitol Records album "Judy
In London" |
4:43 |
I
Can't Give You Anything But Love (Baby) |
April
23, 1961 live performance at Carnegie Hall |
6:33 |
Rock-A-Bye
Your Baby (With A Dixie Melody) |
April
23, 1961 live performance at Carnegie
Hall |
3:01 |
Smile |
03-10-1963
"Sunday NIght At The London Palladium" TV special |
4:18 |
Top of page
Song
Title |
Source |
Time |
Disc
3
(all tracks from Judy's 1963/64 T. V. Series - show numbers and dates
listed below) |
Just
In Time |
Show
22, taped 2/14/64, aired 2/23 and show 26, 3/29/64 |
3:17 |
What'll
I Do |
Show
19, taped 1/17/64, aired 2/2/64 |
1:42 |
The
Lonesome Road (with Bobby Darin) |
Show
14, taped 11/30/63, aired 12/29/63 |
2:14 |
Here's
That Rainy Day |
Show
11, taped 10/18/63, aired 1/5/64 |
4:33 |
I
Feel A Song Comin' On |
Show
1, taped 10/11/63, aired 12/8/63 |
2:06 |
Liza |
Show
3, taped 7/16/63, aired 11/10/63 |
0:47 |
Together
(Wherever We Go) (With Liza Minnelli) |
Show
3, taped 7/16/63, aired 11/10/63 |
1:09 |
Shenandoah |
Show
16, taped 12/3/63, aired 1/2/64 |
3:44 |
On
The Atchison, Topeka And The Santa Fe |
Show
23, taped 2/21/64, aired 3/8/64 |
2:50 |
A
Cottage For Sale |
Show
2, taped 7/7/63, aired 11/10/63 |
3:10 |
I
Left My Heart In San Francisco (with Tony Bennett) |
Show
5, taped 7/30/63, aired 12/15/63 |
1:09 |
San
Francisco |
Show
22, taped 2/14/64, aired 2/23/63 |
3:38 |
Once
In A Lifetime |
Show
23, taped 2/21/64, aired 3/8/64 |
2:03 |
I'm
Always Chasing Rainbows |
Show
23, taped 2/21/64, aired 3/8/64 |
3:02 |
Get
Happy/Happy Days Are Here Again (with Barbra Streisand) |
Show
9, taped 10/4/63, aired 10/6/63 |
2:28 |
Disc
4
(all tracks except the last are from Judy's 1963/64 T. V. Series - show
numbers and dates listed below) |
The
Last Dance |
Show
26, taped 3/13/64, aired 3/29/64 |
4:18 |
Swanee |
Show
22, taped 2/14/64, aired 2/23/64 |
2:02 |
That
Old Feeling |
Show
26, taped 3/13/64, aired 3/29/64 |
2:37 |
Battle
Hymn Of The Republic |
Show
16, taped 12/13/63, aired 1/12/64 |
4:13 |
I've
Got My Love To Keep Me Warm (With Count Basie And His
Orchestra) |
Show
2, taped 7/5/63-7/7/63, aired 11/10/64 |
1:33 |
Judy
At The Place Medley |
Show
22, taped 2/14/64, aired 2/23/64 |
6:59 |
All
Alone |
Show
18, taped 1/14/64, aired 1/26/64 |
1:45 |
By
Myself |
Show
17, taped 12/20/63, aired 1/9/64 |
4:25 |
Old
Man River |
Show
1, taped 6/24/63, aired 12/8/63 |
3:11 |
A
Foggy Day (In London Town) |
Show
22, taped 2/14/64, aired 2/23/64 and Show 26, aired 3/29/64 |
2:36 |
Medley
(With Peggy Lee) (Big Bad Bill [Is Sweet William Now]/Bill
Bailey, Won't You Please come Home |
Show
13, taped 11/8/63, aired 12/1/63 |
1:08 |
Too
late Now |
Show
1, taped 6/24/63, aired 12/8/63 |
2:48 |
Through
The Years |
Show
11, taped 10/18/63, aired 1/5/64 |
3:25 |
If
I Only Had A Brain (With Ray Bolger) |
Show
10, taped 10/11/63, aired 3/1/64 |
1:29 |
We're
Off To See The Wizard (With Ray Bolger) |
Show
10, taped 10/11/63, aired 3/1/64 |
0:45 |
Over
The Rainbow |
January
1969 live performance at The Talk Of The Town nightclub
in London, England |
5:11 |
Top of page
Videotape
All performances from The Judy Garland
Show |
Intro |
.. |
.. |
Swanee |
Show
22, taped 2/14/64, aired 2/23/64 |
1:50 |
Commercial
(Lucky Strike Cigarettes: "Lucky's Separate The
Men From The Boys" |
|
|
Medley:
It's Almost Like Being In Love / This Can’t Be
Love |
Show
22, taped 02/14/63, aired 02/23/64 |
3:12 |
What'll
I Do? |
Show
19, taped 1/17/64, aired 2/2/64 |
2:35 |
Intro |
|
|
Battle
Hymn of the Republic |
Show
16, taped 12/13/63, aired 1/12/64 |
2:13 |
Come
Rain Or Come Shine |
Show
3, taped 7/16/63, aired 11/10/63 |
3:30 |
Together
(with Liza Minnelli) |
Show
3, taped 7/16/63, aired 11/10/63 |
1:08 |
Commercial
(Contact Cold Medicine: "Oz" characters) |
|
|
When
Your Lover Has Gone |
2nd
version, Show #24 |
3:18 |
Intro |
|
|
Lost
In The Stars |
Show
24, taped 02/23/64, aired 03/15/64 |
3:47 |
As
Long As He Needs Me |
Show
3, taped 7/16/63, aired 11/17/63 |
4:20 |
Top of page
|

REVIEWS
Vital Reissues
Publication: Billboard
Date: Saturday, December 12 1998
JUDY GARLAND
Judy
PRODUCERS: Joel Dorn, Adam Dorn. Co-Producer : Scott Schechter.
32
Records 29002
Although there have been Judy Garland retrospectives
on various labels in the past several years, none has gone as
deep as this one has in representing the breadth of the late
diva's multifaceted career. The box consists of four CDs
with songs arranged in chronological order, a half-hour video
of Garland's TV appearances, and a 102-page booklet loaded
with anecdotes, photos, and testimonials from critics, musicians,
and admirers‹including Aretha Franklin.
Atlantic Records alumnus Joel Dorn and his son, who operate
the New York-based 32 Records, acquired audio and video rights
to "The Judy Garland Show" material, which constitutes
discs three and four, plus parts of the video. Elsewhere,
the multimedia set includes Garland's first known recording
("Blue Butterfly"), her MGM film classics (including,
of course, "Over The Rainbow" from "The Wizard
Of Oz"), two tracks from the landmark "Judy At
Carnegie Hall" live album, and a host of other treasures.
The book features photos from the Milton Greene archives;
essays by Will Friedwald, Camille Paglia, and Scott Schechter;
and an interview with longtime Garland associate Mort Lindsay
by Joel Dorn. A wonderful tribute to an American legend.
*************************************************
From AMG Reviews
Producer Joel Dorn acquired rights to the audio
and video recordings of the 1963-4 television series The Judy
Garland Show, but then became more ambitious in creating this
four-CD (plus half-hour VHS tape) box set. Apparently with the
assistance of Garland fan Scott Schecter, Dorn acquired other
Garland recordings, notably airchecks, and licensed around 20
tracks from other labels. The result isn't exactly the definitive
Garland retrospective, but it certainly has more range than
either The Complete Decca Masters (Plus) or The One Only. Garland
was primarily a star of movie musicals and a concert singer,
also performing extensively on radio and television, yet was
only incidentally a recording artist. So the Dorn approach
actually makes more sense than previous ones, and the set is
full of intriguing rarities, all of which turn up on the first
two CDs. The third and fourth discs are devoted to material
from The Judy Garland Show, including guest stars Bobby Darin,
Liza Minnelli, Tony Bennett, Barbra Streisand, Count Basie,
Peggy Lee, and Ray Bolger. If you didn't know better, you'd
think her whole career led up to that unsuccessful program,
which ran only one season. Dorn gives a multiplicity of views
of the singer, not only in his song selections, but also in
the odd collection of five essays contained in the heavily
illustrated, 100-page booklet. As with the CDs and video performances,
various sides of Garland are revealed, more or less accurately,
but the whole of her remains elusive. The overall result is
a kind of audio-visual scrapbook with many illuminating elements
that remains an overgrown compilation of material from The
Judy Garland Show. The collection easily could have been fit
on three CDs rather than four, and the list price is rather
high for the contents. All of this suggests that Judy is more
an artifact than a retrospective, but for an artist who inspired
such desperate fan worship, that may be appropriate.
- William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
*************************************************
MUSIC: A Bundle of Emotion From 'Miss Show Business'
NY TIMES review of "JUDY"
By STEPHEN HOLDEN
Published: October 18, 1998
''JUDY.'' Pure feeling. Judy Garland didn't just deliver it when she sang,
she embodied it, no matter how ragged her voice or how histrionic her delivery.
The sound of that much emotion so densely concentrated wasn't always easy to
take. Like no other American singer, Garland erased the line between laughter
and tears, suggesting a barely suppressed hysteria with each gasp and choked-up
cry.
Edith Piaf, who was seven years Garland's senior, also delivered pure feeling,
but it was harsher, even sadder, and more animalistic. Even so, Garland, who
conveyed the same mixture of wracked fragility and resilience, was America's
answer to the Parisian legend. Both women were tiny, explosive and self-destructive,
dying at 47 yet paradoxically coming to symbolize survival over terrible odds.
Until the release of ''Judy'' (32 Records), a four-CD career retrospective
that comes with an excellent video showing highlights from her 1963-64 television
variety show, Garland's recorded legacy was scattered among several different
labels. This set, produced by Joel Dorn and his son, Adam, with the Garland
archivist Scott Schechter, encompasses the breadth of Garland's recording career,
from an early 1929 recording of the 7-year-old vaudevillian through a stunning,
stripped-to-the-bone 1969 concert performance of ''Over the Rainbow,'' recorded
in London five months before her death.
''Judy'' goes out of its way to intersperse familiar songs with fascinating
esoterica and previously unheard concert performances. Her version of ''Over
the Rainbow'' in ''The Wizard of Oz,'' for instance, is prefaced with a dramatic
re-creation made for radio of the composer Harold Arlen ''teaching'' Garland
the song, which he sings in a sweet cantorial tenor.
By 1946, Garland's wistful lost-little-girl sound had ripened into a brassier
post-vaudevillian trumpet. The set includes many crucial movie songs, the most
wrenching being ''The Man That Got Away'' from ''A Star Is Born.'' The selections
from Garland's years at Capitol include two swinging Nelson Riddle-arranged
performances and two dark-night-of-the-soul selections from her Gordon Jenkins
album, ''Alone'' as well as are high points from her landmark 1961 concert
album, ''Judy At Carnegie Hall.''
Disks three and four concentrate almost entirely on excerpts (in mono) from
Garland's television show and include her first television duet with Liza Minnelli
as well as duets with Tony Bennett (Garland's favorite male singer), Bobby
Darin and Barbra Streisand (their famous medley of ''Get Happy!'' and ''Happy
Days Are Here Again''). Also here are her rousing post-Kennedy assassination
version of ''The Battle Hymn of the Republic'' and a heart-stopping rendition
of her favorite song, ''Through the Years.''
Even at its most disturbing, it's powerful stuff. A performer who always gave
her all, Garland more than lived up to her nickname (and title of her first
Capitol album) ''Miss Show Business.''
STEPHEN HOLDEN
Top of page
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 DISC
CREDITS
Produced by Joel Dorn and Adam Dorn for
The 3 Ears
Co-Producer: Scott Schechter
Design/Illustration: Page Simon
Mastered by Gene Paul at DB Plus Digital
Services, NYC
Sonic Solutions by Scott Paul and Mark Fellows
at DB Plus Digital Services, NYC
Cover Illustration: Nancy Dwyer, Page Simon,
Oliver Wasow
Judy Garland Images on pages 2, 6, 8, 18, 27,
37, 56, 81, 95, and 96 © 1998 The Archives of Milton H.
Greene, LLC. All rights reserved.
Cover Illustration based on photographs by Milton
H. Greene
Production Coordinators: Michael Weiner
and Becky Wisdom
Editorial Assistance: Suzanne Cleary, John
Kruth, Page Simon
A few of us would like to thank the many people
who helped us.
for making this box set possible Eli Okun, Alan Rubens, Adam
Varon, Bruce Resnikoff, Sheryl Gold, Jay Boberg, Keith Zajic,
Julie D'Angelo, Mark Pinkus and John Ingrassia.
Michael Weiner and Becky Wisdom.
Special thanks to Page Simon for above and beyond.
Adam for doing the hard work.
Faye Rosen for her eye and her ear.
John Kruth for his time when it was needed.
Gene Paul, Scott paul and Mark Fellows for their usual great
work.
Joshua Green for giving us access to his father's archives.
Scott Schechter for sharing his knowledge and time.
-- Joel Dorn
Michael Weiner thanks Andy Dowding of A To Z.
Page Simon thanks Tonianne Schlamp; the folks at Ralmond Graphics;
and Harvey Delorme for the proverb. |
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