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Product Details

  • An MVD Exclusive
  • SKU: ZM202111
  • Format: CD
  • UPC: 880956211121
  • Street Date: 12/24/21
  • PreBook Date: 11/05/21
  • Label: Zoho »
  • Genre: Jazz
  • Run Time: 51 mins
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Year of Production: 2021
  • Box Lot: 35
  • Territory: WORLD
  • Language: English

 

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  • Director:

 

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Dawn Derow - My Ship: Songs From 1941

Singer Dawn Derow's debut ZOHO CD is a tribute to the year 1941's iconic performers Glenn Miller, Bing Crosby, Duke Ellington , a young Frank Sinatra.

Dawn Derow - My Ship: Songs From 1941
  • List Price: $16.99  
  • Your Price: $16.99
  • In Stock: 97
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World War II seems so far behind us. But in her acclaimed cabaret show, My Ship: Songs from 1941, and in this album of its music, Dawn Derow--a smart, sexy, expressive, and vocally polished woman of today--evokes that year as vividly as if it were happening now. You'll be plunged into a time of massive upheaval and all its colliding emotions--the wistfulness, the loss, the giddy escapism that music could bring.

Directed by the acclaimed cabaret singer Jeff Harnar, My Ship, which premiered in 2017, earned MAC Awards (from the Manhattan Association of Cabarets and Clubs) for both her and Harnar.

The show is, in part, a tribute to the performers who kept hopes high until victory was ours. Dawn recalls the sassy swing of "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," the Andrews Sisters' hosanna to a trumpet god who did double duty in the military. She conjures up the torchy yearning of Billie Holiday, whose "Lover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be?)" spoke for a country full of women left alone. Dinah Shore, the G.I.'s favorite singing sweetheart, comes to mind as Dawn sings one of Shore's early trademarks, "Skylark," with lullaby tenderness. In Dawn's hands, "Chattanooga Choo Choo" is a come-hither invitation to loosen your tie and stay awhile.

"Why Don't We Do This More Often?" was a hit for the grinning, professorial bandleader Kay Kyser and his two wholesome songbirds, Ginny Simms and Harry Babbitt. Dawn's version is as cozy as a goodnight kiss. Teamed with Aaron Heick on clarinet, she makes a jam session out of "Let's Get Away from It All," a double-sided hit for Tommy Dorsey and his legendary flock of singers: Frank Sinatra, Jo Stafford, and her fellow Pied Pipers. From Walt Disney's Dumbo comes "Baby Mine," a lullaby. Dawn and her pianist/music director, Ian Herman, go it alone. Then she unleashes the wrath of a woman spurned in Johnny Mercer and Harold Arlen's "Blues in the Night," which was all over the 1941 charts in five hit versions.

James Gavin, New York City, 2021

Track Listing

  • Lover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be?)
  • Let’s Get Away From It All / How About You
  • Skylark
  • Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy / Don’t Sit Under The Apple Tree / Hut Sut Song
  • Why Don't We Do This More Often?
  • Chattanooga Choo Choo
  • Just Squeeze Me (But Please Don't Tease Me) / I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
  • Blues in the Night
  • Baby Mine (from "Dumbo")
  • The Saga of Jenny (from "Lady in the Dark")
  • My Ship (from "Lady in the Dark")
  • At Last
  • White Christmas
  • (There’ll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs Of Dover

Sales Points

  • Winner 2022 MAC AWARD Recording/Lamott Friedman Award

Press Quotes

Enough with fighting the current wars, they aren't leaving any lasting music in their wake. As long as we're sitting here in the shadow of Pearl Harbor Day, let's roll the clock back 80 years to when music was a force that carried us through. Recapturing the lightning in a bottle that her award winning show delivered, Derow serves up a theme of 1941s greatest hits, sinking her teeth into the material without histrionics or a lack of understanding the material. Really much more than a trip down memory lane, this is a soundtrack for real patriots and not manques. A text book example of how to take a journey through the past.

     —Chris Spector, Midwest Record

  

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