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  1. Sony Music Distribution included this CD in a box set entitled The Complete Collection, which contains fifty-eight of his studio albums, 4 compilation, three DVDs, six volumes of Bennett’s non-album singles, a previously unreleased CD of his Las Vegas debut from 1964, and two discs of rarities, including Bennett’s first recording, an Army V-Disc of “St. James Infirmary Blues, and was ...

  2. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2000 CD release of "Stringing The Blues" on Discogs. Everything Releases Artists Labels. ... Vocals – Harold Arlen.

    • (1)
    • US
    • 9
    • 2 x CD, Compilation, Mono
  3. Easy Strain (lyric: Phil Shapiro) I Want Your Kisses If You Want My Kisses (lyric: Phil Shapiro) to the top. 1926. Minor Gaff (Blues Fantasy) (instrumental by Harold Arluck & Dick George) *. to the top. 1927. Buffalo Rhythm (instrumental by Harold Arluck, Ivan Beaty & Marvin Smolev) *.

  4. The title of Farrell’s first pop album, I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues, made with arranger Luther Henderson and released by Columbia Records in 1960 (CD 1465, CS 8256), derives from an Arlen song on the disk. Farrell begins it with a vocalise on a high F, swooping down two octaves in a blues-tinged arpeggio ( 11.9).

  5. Harold and Ray quickly renewed their friendship and even decided to share an apartment on West Fifty-seventh Street. Although Harold spent most of his time arranging, playing the piano and singing, he collaborated with Dick George in 1926 to compose Minor Gaff (Blues Fantasy). The solo piano piece, which was his first published music, bore the ...

  6. In 1932, Arlen and Koehler wrote the hit song I've Got A Right To Sing The Blues for a show called Earl Carroll's Vanities, which ran at the Broadway Theater for only eighty-seven performances. Then, in 1932 Arlen paired up with lyricist E.Y. (Yip) Harburg to write Satan's Lil' Lamb for a musical review called Americana .

  7. 1932 by Mills Music. Composer (s) Harold Arlen. Lyricist (s) Ted Koehler. " I've Got the World on a String " is a 1932 popular jazz song composed by Harold Arlen, with lyrics written by Ted Koehler. It was written for the twenty-first edition of the Cotton Club series which opened on October 23, 1932, the first of the Cotton Club Parades.