Doris Day Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book

- catalog number:BCD15800
- weight in Kg 2.4
Doris Day: Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book
Article properties:Doris Day: Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book
Interpret: Doris Day
Album titlle: Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book
Label Bear Family Records
Genre Pop
- Preiscode HK
Artikelart Box set
EAN: 4000127158000
- weight in Kg 2.4
Day, Doris - Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book Box set 1 | ||||
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01 | What Does A Woman Do | Doris Day | ||
02 | Please Don't Eat The Daisies | Doris Day | ||
03 | Falling | Doris Day | ||
04 | The Blue Train | Doris Day | ||
05 | Daffa Down Dilly (fast version) | Doris Day | ||
06 | Here We Go Again | Doris Day | ||
07 | On The Street Where You Live | Doris Day | ||
08 | When I'm Not Near The Boy I Love | Doris Day | ||
09 | I Love Paris | Doris Day | ||
10 | The Surrey With The Fringe On Top | Doris Day | ||
11 | Ohio | Doris Day | ||
12 | I've Grown Accustomed To His Face | Doris Day | ||
13 | They Say It's Wonderful | Doris Day | ||
14 | A Wonderful Guy | Doris Day | ||
15 | Show Time (part 1) | Doris Day | ||
16 | Show Time (part 2) | Doris Day | ||
17 | People Will Say We're In Love | Doris Day | ||
18 | I Got The Sun In The Morning | Doris Day | ||
19 | Happy Talk | Doris Day | ||
20 | Ridin' High | Doris Day | ||
21 | Stay With The Happy People | Doris Day | ||
22 | Clap Yo' Hands | Doris Day | ||
23 | Singin' In The Rain | Doris Day | ||
24 | I Want To Be Happy | Doris Day | ||
25 | Make Someone Happy | Doris Day | ||
26 | On The Sunny Side Of The Street | Doris Day | ||
27 | Twinkle And Shine | Doris Day | ||
28 | Bright And Shiny | Doris Day | ||
29 | Gotta Feelin' | Doris Day |
Day, Doris - Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book Box set 2 | ||||
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01 | Keep Smilin', Keep Laughin', Be Happy | Doris Day | ||
02 | Oh What A Beautiful Dream | Doris Day | ||
03 | I'll Buy That Dream | Doris Day | ||
04 | Time To Say Goodnight | Doris Day | ||
05 | All I Do Is Dream Of You | Doris Day | ||
06 | My Ship | Doris Day | ||
07 | We'll Love Again | Doris Day | ||
08 | I Believe In Dreams | Doris Day | ||
09 | Periwinkle Blue | Doris Day | ||
10 | Let No Walls Divide | Doris Day | ||
11 | Look All Around | Doris Day | ||
12 | In The Secret Place | Doris Day | ||
13 | As A Child | Doris Day | ||
14 | Someday I'll Find You | Doris Day | ||
15 | You Stepped Out Of A Dream | Doris Day | ||
16 | I Have Dreamed | Doris Day | ||
17 | Let No Walls Divide | Doris Day | ||
18 | When I Grow Too Old To Dream | Doris Day | ||
19 | Who Knows What Might Have Been | Doris Day | ||
20 | Should I Surrender | Doris Day | ||
21 | Lover Come Back | Doris Day | ||
22 | Close Your Eyes | Doris Day | ||
23 | Fools Rush In | Doris Day | ||
24 | Remind Me | Doris Day | ||
25 | Yes | Doris Day |
Day, Doris - Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book Box set 3 | ||||
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01 | Control Yourself | Doris Day | ||
02 | You're Good For Me | Doris Day | ||
03 | Day Dreaming | Doris Day | ||
04 | Nobody's Heart | Doris Day | ||
05 | Wait Till You See Him | Doris Day | ||
06 | Fools Rush In | Doris Day | ||
07 | Give Me Time | Doris Day | ||
08 | Who Are We To Stay | Doris Day | ||
09 | Nobody's Heart | Doris Day | ||
10 | Day Dreaming | Doris Day | ||
11 | Close Your Eyes | Doris Day | ||
12 | My One And Only Love | Doris Day | ||
13 | In Love In Vain | Doris Day | ||
14 | Falling In Love Again | Doris Day | ||
15 | Nearer My God To Thee | Doris Day | ||
16 | I Need Thee Every Hour | Doris Day | ||
17 | Abide With Me | Doris Day | ||
18 | The Lord's Prayer | Doris Day | ||
19 | Walk With Him | Doris Day | ||
20 | In The Garden | Doris Day | ||
21 | The Prodigal Son | Doris Day | ||
22 | If I Can Help Somebody | Doris Day | ||
23 | Scarlet Ribbons | Doris Day | ||
24 | Bless This House | Doris Day | ||
25 | You'll Never Walk Alone | Doris Day | ||
26 | Be Still And Know | Doris Day |
Day, Doris - Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book Box set 4 | ||||
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01 | Let The Little Girl Limbo | Doris Day | ||
02 | Move Over Darling | Doris Day | ||
03 | Twinkle Lullaby | Doris Day | ||
04 | More | Doris Day | ||
05 | Lollipops And Roses | Doris Day | ||
06 | Can't Help Falling In Love | Doris Day | ||
07 | Softly As I Leave You | Doris Day | ||
08 | As Long As He Needs Me | Doris Day | ||
09 | Losing You | Doris Day | ||
10 | Since I Fell For You | Doris Day | ||
11 | Love Him | Doris Day | ||
12 | Night Life | Doris Day | ||
13 | A Fool Such As I | Doris Day | ||
14 | Funny | Doris Day | ||
15 | Moonlight Lover | Doris Day | ||
16 | Send Me No Flowers | Doris Day | ||
17 | Rainbow's End | Doris Day | ||
18 | Oo-Wee Baby | Doris Day | ||
19 | Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas | Doris Day | ||
20 | Toyland | Doris Day | ||
21 | The Christmas Song | Doris Day | ||
22 | Winter Wonderland | Doris Day | ||
23 | Silver Bells | Doris Day | ||
24 | White Christmas | Doris Day | ||
25 | Be A Child At Christmas Time | Doris Day | ||
26 | Snowfall | Doris Day | ||
27 | Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! | Doris Day | ||
28 | The Christmas Waltz | Doris Day |
Day, Doris - Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book Box set 5 | ||||
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01 | I'll Be Home For Christmas | Doris Day | ||
02 | Christmas Present | Doris Day | ||
03 | Getting To Know You | Doris Day | ||
04 | Sleepy Baby | Doris Day | ||
05 | With A Smile And A Song | Doris Day | ||
06 | Whatever Will Be, Will Be | Doris Day | ||
07 | Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah | Doris Day | ||
08 | Give A Little Whistle | Doris Day | ||
09 | The Inch Worm | Doris Day | ||
10 | Swinging On A Star | Doris Day | ||
11 | The Lilac Tree | Doris Day | ||
12 | The Children's Marching Song | Doris Day | ||
13 | Do Re Mi | Doris Day | ||
14 | High Hopes | Doris Day | ||
15 | Send Me No Flowers | Doris Day | ||
16 | I Remember You | Doris Day | ||
17 | Sentimental Journey | Doris Day | ||
18 | It Could Happen To You | Doris Day | ||
19 | At Last | Doris Day | ||
20 | I'll Never Smile Again | Doris Day | ||
21 | Serenade In Blue | Doris Day | ||
22 | It's Been A Long, Long Time | Doris Day | ||
23 | The More I See You | Doris Day | ||
24 | I'm Beginning To See The Light | Doris Day | ||
25 | I Had The Craziest Dream | Doris Day | ||
26 | Come To Baby Do | Doris Day | ||
27 | Slightly Out Of Tune | Doris Day | ||
28 | Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars | Doris Day |
Day, Doris - Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book Box set 6 | ||||
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01 | Meditation | Doris Day | ||
02 | Summer Has Gone | Doris Day | ||
03 | Fly Me To The Moon | Doris Day | ||
04 | Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps | Doris Day | ||
05 | Our Day Will Come | Doris Day | ||
06 | Be True To Me | Doris Day | ||
07 | Dansero | Doris Day | ||
08 | Por Favor | Doris Day | ||
09 | How Insentitive | Doris Day | ||
10 | Be Mine Tonight | Doris Day | ||
11 | Catch The Bouquet | Doris Day | ||
12 | Another Go Around | Doris Day | ||
13 | A Whisper Away | Doris Day | ||
14 | Do Not Disturb | Doris Day | ||
15 | Au Revoir Is Goodbye With A Smile | Doris Day | ||
16 | There They Are | Doris Day | ||
17 | Every Now And Then (You Come Around) | Doris Day | ||
18 | The Glass Bottom Boat | Doris Day | ||
19 | Sorry | Doris Day | ||
20 | Caprice | Doris Day | ||
21 | For All We Know | Doris Day | ||
22 | Snuggled On Your Shoulder | Doris Day | ||
23 | Street Of Dreams | Doris Day | ||
24 | Life Is Just A Bowl Of Cherries | Doris Day | ||
25 | If I Had My Life To Live Over/Let Me Call.. | Doris Day | ||
26 | Are You Lonesome Tonight | Doris Day | ||
27 | All Alone | Doris Day | ||
28 | Sleepy Lagoon | Doris Day | ||
29 | Faded Summer Love | Doris Day |
Day, Doris - Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book Box set 7 | ||||
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01 | For All We Know | Doris Day | ||
02 | Wonderful One | Doris Day | ||
03 | The Blue Train (w/o chorus) | Doris Day | ||
04 | Daffa Down Dilly | Doris Day | ||
05 | Let The Little Girl Limbo (double vocal) | Doris Day | ||
06 | Catch The Bouquet (alt.) | Doris Day | ||
07 | Another Go Around (alt.) | Doris Day | ||
08 | Do Not Disturb (different rhythm) | Doris Day | ||
09 | The Glass Bottom Boat (alt.) | Doris Day | ||
10 | Circus Is On Parade (& M. RAYE & J. DURANTE) | Doris Day | ||
11 | Over And Over Again | Doris Day | ||
12 | Why Can't I (& MARTHY RAYE) | Doris Day | ||
13 | This Can't Be Love | Doris Day | ||
14 | The Most Beautiful Girl In Thw World (S.BOYD) | Doris Day | ||
15 | My Romance | Doris Day | ||
16 | The Most Beautiful Girl...(& JIMMY DURANTE) | Doris Day | ||
17 | Little Girl Blue | Doris Day | ||
18 | Sawdust Spangles & Dreams(BOYD,RAYE& DURANTE) | Doris Day |
Day, Doris - Move Over Darling 8-CD-Box & 120-Page Book Box set 8 | ||||
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01 | Overture | Doris Day | ||
02 | Colonel Buffalo Bill (LEONARD STOKES) | Doris Day | ||
03 | I'm A Bad, Bad Man (ROBERT GOULET) | Doris Day | ||
04 | Doin' What Comes Naturally | Doris Day | ||
05 | The Girl That I Marry (ROBERT GOULET) | Doris Day | ||
06 | You Can't Get A Man With A Gun | Doris Day | ||
07 | They Say It's Wonderful (& ROBERT GOULET) | Doris Day | ||
08 | My Defenses Are Down (ROBERT GOULET) | Doris Day | ||
09 | Moonshine Lullaby | Doris Day | ||
10 | I'm An Indian Too | Doris Day | ||
11 | I Got Lost In His Arms | Doris Day | ||
12 | Who Do You Love I Hope (K.BROWN & R.WINTERS) | Doris Day | ||
13 | I Got The Sun In The Mornin' | Doris Day | ||
14 | Anything You Can Do (& ROBERT GOULET) | Doris Day | ||
15 | There's No Business Like Show Business (ENS.) | Doris Day |
Doris Day
April 3, 1922 – May 12, 2019
Doris Day radiated goodness. On the silver screen, she represented the woman every man wanted, or at least should have wanted—smart, sweet, and beautiful. In her later years, Day’s energies were largely channeled towards the welfare of the animals she loved. And before she became one of America’s most bankable film actresses, Day, who died on Monday, May 12 in 2019 at the age of 97, was a popular recording artist whose career commenced as a singer with several notable big bands.
Doris Kappelhoff was her maiden name. She was born in Cincinnati on April 3, 1922 and initially cultivated an interest in dance, but that was curtailed by a 1937 auto accident that injured her leg. During her extended period of healing, Doris began singing along with the big bands she heard on the radio, just for fun (Ella Fitzgerald was her favorite singer). Her mother encouraged her, hiring a music teacher, Grace Raine, for her sidelined daughter. Before long, the newly minted chanteuse was appearing on local radio and at a Chinese restaurant that featured live music.
Local bandleader Barney Rapp hired the newcomer to replace his pregnant wife as his orchestra’s ‘girl singer.’ Rapp changed her surname to Day, inspired by one of the numbers she sang, Day After Day. After Rapp, Day took similar singing posts with the big bands of Jimmy James, Bob Crosby, and Les Brown and His Band of Renown. The latter was where Day got her big break: she fronted Brown’s orchestra on a 1945 rendition of Sentimental Journeyfor Columbia that became a huge seller. It wasn’t her only trip to the winner’s circle with Brown’s outfit—she also scored with My Dreams Are Getting Better All The Time(her second chart-topper),Till The End Of Time, and Aren’t You Glad You’re You?(several more hits with Brown transpired over the next couple of years). Since Brown was Bob Hope’s bandleader, there was plenty of radio exposure for the young vocalist.
Day segued into movies despite having no acting experience. Her first role came in director Michael Curtiz’s 1948 musical ‘Romance on the High Seas.’ Its soundtrack included Day’s first big solo seller, It’s Magic, the work of Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn (they had recommended her for her part in the film). A couple of months earlier, her duet with Buddy Clark, Love Somebody, had climbed to the peak of the pop hit parade. Day quickly developed into a major musical film star, lighting up the screen in ‘Tea For Two’ (1950), ‘On Moonlight Bay’ (1951), and the hugely popular ’51 release ‘I’ll See You In My Dreams,’ the film bio of songsmith Gus Kahn.
Day’s lengthy solo recording career at Columbia was filled with hits. Her biggest in 1949 was Again; Hoop-Dee-Doocracked the Top Ten the next year (it was but one of her seven chart entries in ‘50), and Day scored big in 1951 with Would I Love You (Love You, Love You)and Shanghai. Her eight ’52 hits included duets with Frankie Laine, Donald O’Connor, and Johnnie Ray and the solo #1 A Guy Is A Guy. 1953 brought seven more chart bows including two more duets with Ray. Day’s ’54 hit haul was led by her tender ballad Secret Love, a chart-topper not only at home, where she registered nine hits in all that year, but in Great Britain too. It hailed from her movie ‘Calamity Jane,’ where Day played the raucous title role.
‘Love Me Or Leave Me,’ Day’s starring turn in the dramatic 1955 bio of singer Ruth Etting, proved that she could do more than dazzle in frothy musicals. Although the advent of rock and roll slowed Day’s constant assaults to the upper reaches of the pop hit parade somewhat, she had a mammoth seller in 1956 with the lilting Que Sera, Sera (Whatever Will Be, Will Be), from the Alfred Hitchcock-directed thriller ‘The Man Who Knew Too Much,’ where she co-starred with James Stewart (the song won an Oscar). A couple of years later, Day had her last major hit record with the delightful Everybody Loves A Lover, but by then her film career had taken precedence anyway.
Day’s movie career struck its apex with a series of romantic comedies where she was teamed with Rock Hudson: ‘Pillow Talk’ (1959), ‘Lover Come Back’ (1961), and ‘Send Me No Flowers’ (1964). Hudson wasn’t her only notable leading man during this period; she shared the screen with David Niven in ‘Please Don’t Eat The Daisies’ (1960), Cary Grant in ‘That Touch Of Mink’ (1962), and with James Garner in ‘The Thrill Of It All’ and ‘Move Over, Darling’ (both 1963). ‘The Glass Bottom Boat’ with Rod Taylor was Day’s last major film success in 1966.
Day starred in a self-named CBS-TV sitcom from 1968 to 1973. She was deeply involved in animal rescue organizations from the ‘70s on, founding the Doris Day Animal League in 1987 and the Doris Day Horse Rescue and Adoption Center in 2011. Her son, Terry Melcher, produced major hits by The Byrds and Paul Revere and The Raiders for Columbia and was a member of the surf music-oriented Rip Chords on their ’64 smash HeyLittle Cobra, which he co-produced (Melcher died in 2004).
© 2019 Bear Family Records GmbH
Doris Mary Anne von Kappelhoff entered the world on April 3, 1924, in Evanston, a comfortable middle class suburb of Cincinnati, Ohio. Her first name was borrowed from her mother's favorite silent film actress, Doris Kenyon. Both of her parents were born in America to German immigrants, and she was their third and final child (one son, Richard, died at the age of two long before Doris was born.
The other boy, Paul, was three years her elder). Her father, Frederick Wilhelm von Kappelhoff (known as William), was a music teacher; church organist; and choral master with a pronounced affinity for classical music. Her mother, Alma Sophia Welz, was an earthy, gregarious woman with a predilection for hillbilly music and country and western tunes. Her parents' diverse musical tastes (neither of which exerted any lasting influence on young Doris) were symptomatic of a deeper rift between them, and they were divorced in 1936. Alma Sophia moved her children to the nearby suburb of College Hill, but retained her job in the Evanston Bakery, which helped to finance the dance lessons that Doris had pursued since kindergarten.
A disastrous "debut performance", during which her turn in a school minstrel show was abbreviated when she wet her pants, did nothing to deter the youngster's fascination with popular music in general and dancing in particular. She attended ballet school, learned to tap dance, and by the age of twelve had developed an act with a neighborhood boy named Jerry Doherty. In 1937 the duo won the five hundred dollar first prize in a local amateur contest.
It was decided to use this money to help finance a trip to Hollywood, where they might further develop their skills at the well known Fanchon & Marco dance school. The fledgling partnership was so buoyed by their four weeks of tutelage under the attentive eye of film choreographer Louis Da Pron that they decided, along with their mothers, to return to Cincinnati and gather their possessions for a permanent move to the West Coast.
On Friday the 13th, October, 1937, the night of a farewell party thrown by family friends, Doris was in the back seat of a car that collided with a train at a railroad crossing. Her right leg was shattered, the move to Hollywood was forgotten, and presumably Astaire & Rogers could breathe easier once again. It was during her lengthy recuperation, compounded by a fall that broke the knitting bones once again, that the events which turned Day into a singer were set in motion. "So you see, every 'break' is a good one!," she later noted wryly.
The long commute to school was unmanageable on her crutches, so Doris bided her time in the family's new apartment. It was upstairs from her Uncle Charley's tavern, and the music of the latest popular favorites from the juke box down below was constantly in the background. In her boredom she turned to the radio, which regularly featured remote broadcasts from the great dance bands of the era. She enjoyed Benny Goodman and the Dorseys and their ilk, though as she was later to note in her autobiography, "... the one radio voice I listened to above others belonged to Ella Fitzgerald.
There was a quality to her voice that fascinated me, and I'd sing along with her, trying to catch the subtle ways she shaded her voice, the casual yet clear way she sang the words." At this time Fitzgerald was singing with the band that brought her to stardom, Chick Webb and his Orchestra (together they enjoyed one of the most successful recordings of all time with A-Tisket, A-Tasket in 1938). Her influence on Day is very much in evidence on many of Doris's early recordings with the Les Brown band, as well as on the four small-group sides that open this collection.
In hopes that this newfound interest in singing might supplant dancing in her daughter's life, Day's mother brought her to vocal coach Grace Raine, the woman whom Doris today credits as the, "one person who had the greatest effect on the career that was in store for me. "Though not a vocalist herself, Raine was a gifted • teacher who impressed upon her young pupil the importance of sincerely feeling a song's lyrics, and communicating their meaning in an intimate, personal manner.
"The most important thing that Grace Raine told me," recalls Day, "was that when you sing, don't think of a big audience out there. Sing into someone's ear. A person. You're acting." Grace felt that Doris had so much potential that she was willing to accommodate her limited means and gave her three lessons a week for the price of one.
Raine was affiliated with Cincinnati radio station WLW, and to gauge how her protege might sound over the air, she arranged for her to appear on Carlin's Carnival, a local Saturday morning radio show that featured amateur talent. Doris performed Day After Day, the song that was to eventually provide her with...

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