Porgy and Bess - Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald

Porgy and Bess

Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald

  • Genre: Jazz
  • Release Date: 1958-01-01
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 15

  • A Verve Label Group release; ℗ 1958 UMG Recordings, Inc.

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Porgy and Bess: Overture Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald 10:50 USD Album Only
2
Summertime Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald 4:58 USD 1.29
3
I Wants To Stay Here Ella Fitzgerald 4:36 USD 1.29
4
My Man's Gone Now Ella Fitzgerald 4:00 USD 1.29
5
I Got Plenty O' Nuttin' Ella Fitzgerald 3:51 USD 1.29
6
Buzzard Song Ella Fitzgerald 2:57 USD 1.29
7
Bess You Is My Woman Now Ella Fitzgerald 5:28 USD 1.29
8
It Ain't Necessarily So Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong 6:33 USD 1.29
9
What You Want Wid Bess? Ella Fitzgerald 1:59 USD 1.29
10
A Woman Is a Sometime Thing Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong 4:47 USD 1.29
11
Oh, Doctor Jesus Ella Fitzgerald 1:59 USD 1.29
12
Porgy and Bess: Medley: Here C Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong 3:29 USD 1.29
13
There's a Boat Dat's Leavin' S Ella Fitzgerald 4:53 USD 1.29
14
Bess, Oh Where's My Bess? Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong 2:35 USD 1.29
15
Oh Lawd, I'm On My Way Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong 2:57 USD 1.29

Reviews

  • Simply Amazing

    5
    By ChristmasDave
    I can't believe there are no reviews for this album. Porgy and Bess is an American Opera written by the great Geore Gershwin. The music and lyrics are exactly what you would expect from Gershwin. Breathtaking. The songs have an easy, fairy tale quality thanks to the languid tempo and haunting strings and Satchmo's minimalist trumpet. The soundtrack has been recorded many times and many recordings have become a bit dated at this point. This recording, however, is still fresh and mind-boggling after more than half a century. Put simply, it is the collaboration of two of music's most talented and original performers at the top of their game, before age had started to take it's toll. While a few of the songs are forgettable, others are timeless. "Summertime" is, in my opinion, the greatest jazz recording ever. The album is worth buying just for that song.

Videos from this artist