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Connie Francis Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD)

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(Real Gone Music) 92 Tracks - 1961-1962 - Contains the following albums: Sing Along With Connie...more

Connie Francis: Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD)

(Real Gone Music) 92 Tracks - 1961-1962 - Contains the following albums: Sing Along With Connie Francis, Songs To A Swinging Band, At The Copa, Never On Sunday, Folk Song Favorites, Sings Irish Favorites, Do The Twist and Second Hand Love!

Article properties:Connie Francis: Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD)

  • Interpret: Connie Francis

  • Album titlle: Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD)

  • Genre Rock'n'Roll

  • Label Real Gone Music

  • Artikelart CD

  • EAN: 5036408143228

  • weight in Kg 0.195
Francis, Connie - Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD) CD 1
01Sing AlongConnie Francis
02Home On The RangeConnie Francis
03My Wild Irish RoseConnie Francis
04I Love You TrulyConnie Francis
05Tavern In The TownConnie Francis
06And The Band Played OnConnie Francis
07You Tell Me Your DreamConnie Francis
08Down In The ValleyConnie Francis
09In The Good Old SummertimeConnie Francis
10Auld Lang SyneConnie Francis
11You're Nobody ‘Til Somebody Loves YouConnie Francis
12Ol' Man MoseConnie Francis
13How Long Has This Been Going OnConnie Francis
14My Love, My LoveConnie Francis
15It Might As Well Be SpringConnie Francis
16TabooConnie Francis
17Love Is Where You Find ItConnie Francis
18I Got Lost In His ArmsConnie Francis
19Dat's LoveConnie Francis
20Angel EyesConnie Francis
21Gone With The WindConnie Francis
22SwaneeConnie Francis
Francis, Connie - Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD) CD 2
01Ol' Man MoseConnie Francis
02It All Depends On YouConnie Francis
03Many Tears AgoConnie Francis
04You Always Hurt The One You LoveConnie Francis
05Shein Vi De L'vone/Dance Everyone Dance (Hava Naguila)Connie Francis
06Jealous Of YouConnie Francis
07MamaConnie Francis
08Smack Dab In The MiddleConnie Francis
09Al Jolson MedleyConnie Francis
10Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come HomeWhen The Saints Come Marching In
11Never On SundayConnie Francis
12Young At HeartConnie Francis
13Around The WorldConnie Francis
14High NoonConnie Francis
15April LoveConnie Francis
16Where Is Your Heart (Song From Moulin Rouge)Connie Francis
17Three Coins In The FountainConnie Francis
18TammyConnie Francis
19AnnaConnie Francis
20Moonglow And The Theme From 'picnic'Connie Francis
21Love Me TenderConnie Francis
22Love Is A Many Splendored ThingConnie Francis
Francis, Connie - Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD) CD 3
01O SuzannaConnie Francis
02Red River ValleyConnie Francis
03Boll WeevilConnie Francis
04True Love, True LoveConnie Francis
05ClementineConnie Francis
06Aura LeeConnie Francis
07Come On, Jerry (Timber)Connie Francis
08Careless LoveConnie Francis
09Every Night (When The Sun Goes In)Connie Francis
10She'll Be Comin' 'Round The MountainConnie Francis
11Beautiful Brown EyesConnie Francis
12On Top Of Old SmokeyConnie Francis
13Mcnamara's BandConnie Francis
14Mother MachreeConnie Francis
15My Wild Irish RoseConnie Francis
16Dear Old DonegalConnie Francis
17Did Your Mother Come From Ireland7Connie Francis
18Danny BoyConnie Francis
19It's A Great Day For The IrishConnie Francis
20Too-Ra-Loo-Ra-Loo-Ral (That's An Irish Lullaby)Connie Francis
21How Can You Buy KillarneyConnie Francis
22How Are Things In Glocca MorraConnie Francis
23When Irish Eyes Are SmilingConnie Francis
24A Little Bit Of HeavenConnie Francis
Francis, Connie - Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD) CD 4
01Mister TwisterConnie Francis
02Teach Me How To TwistConnie Francis
03Johnny Darlin'Connie Francis
04Telephone LoverConnie Francis
05Mommy Your Daughter's Falling In LoveConnie Francis
06Drop It JoeConnie Francis
07Kiss 'N' TwistConnie Francis
08I Won't Be Home To YouConnie Francis
09My Real HappinessConnie Francis
10Ain't That Better BabyConnie Francis
11Hey Ring-A-DingConnie Francis
12Does Ol' Broadway Ever SleepConnie Francis
13Second Hand LoveConnie Francis
14Someone Else's BoyConnie Francis
15TogetherConnie Francis
16Too Many RulesConnie Francis
17He's My DreamboatConnie Francis
18Gonna Git That ManConnie Francis
19Don't Break The Heart That Loves YouConnie Francis
20Pretty Little BabyConnie Francis
21When The Boy In Your Arms Is The Boy In Your HeartConnie Francis
22It Happened Last NightConnie Francis
23Baby's First ChristmasConnie Francis
24Breakin' In A Brand New Broken HeartConnie Francis
Connie Francis Born on 12 December 1937 as Concetta Rosa Maria Franconero in Newark, New... more
"Connie Francis"

Connie Francis

Born on 12 December 1937 as Concetta Rosa Maria Franconero in Newark, New Jersey.

Connie Francis the female pop icon

Connie Francies was discovered at the age of eleven during a talent show, six years later she received a contract from MGM. Their first single ('Freddy') was released in 1955, which, like some others, initially went unnoticed.

It wasn't until 1958 that 'Who's Sorry Now' (built in 1923) became her first chart hit in the USA, followed by 54 more until 1969. In England the most successful singer of the 50s and 60s brought 24 tracks to the hit lists (1958 - 66), of her 35 German-language original singles, 23 placed between 1960 and 1970.

No other interpreter in the world used the time span after the heyday of rock'n'roll and the beginning of the beat era so cleverly. When Connie Francis' golden years were over, she stood up for UNICEF and went to Vietnam as a singing troop adviser.

Since 1960 she has also appeared in various US films, such as "Where The Boys Are' ('These Include Two', 1960), "Follow The Boys' ('Mein Schiff fährt zu dir', 1962), "Looking For Love' ('Ich wär' so gern verliebt', 1963) and 'When Boy Meets Girl' ('Boy of My Dreams', 1965).

In 1974, after a performance at the Westbury Theatre outside New York, she was attacked and raped - a crime from which she did not recover psychologically for many years. She made guest appearances again in the early 80s, but towards the end of the decade her unstable health again took its toll. After language problems during a show in London's Palladium, there were similar signs during a TV conversation on American television.

In 1991 Connie Francis collapsed during a concert in New Jersey. In 1992, several Francis titles in Germany experienced a renaissance: The Medleys "Jive Connie' and '(10, Connie, Go' shot to the top of the hit lists.

In 1993 she recorded the duets'Que Sera' and'So nah' in Munich with Peter Kraus for Sony's Herzklang label - in England a song from a TV series became a surprise hit:'Lipstick On Your Collar' from 1959.

From the Bear Family book - 1000 pinpricks by Bernd Matheja - BFB10025 -

 

Connie Francis

Connie Rocks

The rock 'n' roll era was a boys club. Most of the top-selling artists were male: just a few female artists could go head-to-head with them. Of the women from that era, Connie Francis was by far the top-seller. Rock 'n' roll was testosterone-rich music, and Connie realized early in her career that she couldn't cut loose with a banshee rockabilly wail, but she could make very believable rock 'n' roll music that was true to her background and her unique talent.

Connie was born Concetta Maria Franconero on December 12, 1938 in Newark, New Jersey. Her parents had been born in the United States to Italian immigrant families. Connie's paternal grandfather arrived in 1905, carrying a battered concertina and little else. Connie sat on the stoop of their house, learning the folk songs from the old country. It soon became clear that she had talent, and began appearing at entry-level talent contests in and around New Jersey, singing and playing the accordion. Connie's father, George Franconero, took an interest in her budding career and took her to New York, trying to get her on a childrens' television show, 'Startime.' "We flagged down the producer of the show, George Scheck, who was hailing a taxi," Connie said later. "My father said, 'Would you listen to my daughter sing?' He said, 'I'm up to here in singers. I can't use singers.' That's when "the accordion saved my life." Scheck said that he would give her an audition if she played the accordion, and she was on 'Startime' for four years. Eventually, Scheck became her manager.

In 1950, Connie appeared coast-to-coast on 'Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts,' and was often on television over the next few years. It was Godfrey, incidentally, who suggested that she change her name to Connie Francis. By age fourteen, Connie was crossing the river to New York, singing demonstration discs for music publishers. In 1955, Lou Levy at Leeds Music financed a session with George Scheck, and they jointly took the masters around to the record labels. The only taker was MGM Records' A&R man, Harry Meyerson. One of the songs on the demo tape was one titled Freddy, and Connie was later told that Meyerson only signed her because his son's name was Freddy and he thought the record would make a good birthday present.

The early singles did little business, and Connie was handed to Jim Vienneau, who was related to MGM Records' founding president, Frank Walker. Vienneau was given the responsibility of bringing MGM into the rock 'n' roll era, and he found a song for Connie called Eighteen. It signalled a new direction and the initial response was promising, but it too failed to chart. After nine consecutive flops, Connie was told that she would get one last shot on MGM before being dropped. Two people guided Connie's career, George Scheck and her father, George Franconero. At her father's insistence, Connie recorded an old jazz age pop tune, Who's Sorry Now, with a double-tracked vocal similar to Patti Page. "My father," said Connie, "had an ear for what people would like from me that was uncanny. On that last session, he said, 'Here's a song I've been trying to shove down your throat for the last year-and-a-half.' I said, 'Don't tell me it's that 1923 song again. Did people actually write their names in 1923? I'm not doing it.' He said, 'Go ahead, have another bomb, and you end your career. I'm surprised they stuck with you this long. Tell you what. Do me a big favor. Pretend I'm gonna die tomorrow and this is my last wish. You pick out your usual three duds and throw this one in for me.'"

George Franconero was right, of course. Released in November 1957, Who's Sorry Now? got a little airplay around the country, but didn't take off until MGM's Philadelphia distributor, Ed Barsky, took a copy to Dick Clark. "Dick heard a sound in me that was totally different," Connie said later. "The reaction was just phenomenal. He played it every day for three months." Connie freely admits that she owes her success to Dick Clark and the repeated plays on 'American Bandstand.' If not for him, she would have been dropped when her contract was up. Who's Sorry Now? reached #3 in 'Cash Box,' #4 in 'Billboard,' and #1 in England.

Another revamped oldie was released as a follow-up, but did nowhere near as well. It was then that music publisher Donnie Kirshner suggested that she listen to two young songwriters he'd just signed, Neil Sedaka and Howie Greenfield. After Sedaka and Greenfield had played all their ballads, Connie said she wanted to hear something peppier. Neil decided to play Stupid Cupid (which, according to Howard Greenfield, was written for Sal Mineo, then promised to the Shepherd Sisters). Connie loved it, and Neil came along to Connie's June 18, 1958 session to play piano. Within a month Stupid Cupid was in the Top 20. The B-side was an older song that dated back to 1929, Carolina Moon. The combination became a double-sided smash, so it was hardly surprising that Connie turned to Sedaka and Greenfield for her next single, Fallin', but it stalled just outside the Top 30, prompting a return to the oldies. My Happiness, a Depression era song that had been a big hit in 1948, capped an incredible year when it became Connie's biggest hit to that point. 1958 was the year Connie Francis arrived, and she wouldn't be out of the charts for another ten years.

1959 opened with Connie considering songs for her next single. She liked one that veteran music publisher, Leonard Joy, sent over, Lipstick On Your Collar. Now she needed a B-side. "Howie Greenfield was my favorite lyricist," she told William Ruhlmann. "Any time a session came up I would sit in my office for days, morning 'til night, and listen to every publisher, every songwriter, but Neil and Howie never failed to come up with a hit for me. It was a great marriage. We thought the same way. Neil and Howie and I planned the song 'Frankie.' Neil would say, 'Okay, what you got on your mind, Concetta?' I said, 'Look at this. I made a list. All of these songs in the last three years, one third of them are names of people or places. One side of my new single, "Lipstick," will be uptempo so I'd like a real dreamy, slow dance ballad for the other side.' Neil said, 'Okay.' Within the next day, 'Frankie' was there." Who was Frankie? The story was put around that the song was a valentine to Frankie Avalon, who'd starred in 'Jamboree,' the movie for which Connie provided the ghosted singing voice of the female lead. Not everyone liked it, though. On April 15, 1959, Connie recorded it with arranger Ray Ellis. "The music starts, and just impromptu, I say, 'Frankie, wherever you are, I love you.' Ray Ellis said, 'This is too much for me. I can't handle this. This is such shit.' I said, 'It's on the record. The kids like that stuff. Just relax, I'm doing it.' He said, 'You ain't gonna have a hit.' I said, 'Let my mother worry about that.'" But a hit it was: a double-sided Top 10 smash. The same session also produced the follow-up, Eddie Curtis' You're Gonna Miss Me (Curtis would later write songs for Connie's 'Do The Twist' LP). The flip-side of You're Gonna Miss Me was Plenty Good Lovin', the first time Connie had placed one of her own songs on a single.

Just in time for Christmas 1959, MGM took the unprecedented step of releasing five Connie Francis albums at once. There was a Christmas album, a country album, an Italian album, a greatest hits album, and a collection of rock 'n' roll million-sellers. Truly something for everyone. From the rock 'n' roll album, we've taken Tweedle Dee, I Hear You Knockin', and the breakthrough hit for MGM labelmate Conway Twitty, It's Only Make Believe. And 1959, like 1958, closed with another Connie Francis song ascending the charts, this time a revival of a 1927 British song, Among My Souvenirs, which she'd found in a publication called 'The Musicians Handbook.' It reached #7 as the year closed. On December 12, 1959, Connie Francis turned twenty-one years old, and shortly before Christmas she reached one of the pinnacles of success in the popular music business when she sold out Carnegie Hall. In contractual discussions with MGM, she'd achieved an unprecedented level of artistic control over her recordings. She was twenty-one and she was in control of her life and career. The following April she received an award for Best Selling Female Vocalist from a record industry trade group, NARM (National Association of Record Merchandisers).

 

 

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Tracklist
Francis, Connie - Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD) CD 1
01 Sing Along
02 Home On The Range
03 My Wild Irish Rose
04 I Love You Truly
05 Tavern In The Town
06 And The Band Played On
07 You Tell Me Your Dream
08 Down In The Valley
09 In The Good Old Summertime
10 Auld Lang Syne
11 You're Nobody ‘Til Somebody Loves You
12 Ol' Man Mose
13 How Long Has This Been Going On
14 My Love, My Love
15 It Might As Well Be Spring
16 Taboo
17 Love Is Where You Find It
18 I Got Lost In His Arms
19 Dat's Love
20 Angel Eyes
21 Gone With The Wind
22 Swanee
Francis, Connie - Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD) CD 2
01 Ol' Man Mose
02 It All Depends On You
03 Many Tears Ago
04 You Always Hurt The One You Love
05 Shein Vi De L'vone/Dance Everyone Dance (Hava Naguila)
06 Jealous Of You
07 Mama
08 Smack Dab In The Middle
09 Al Jolson Medley
10 Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home
11 Never On Sunday
12 Young At Heart
13 Around The World
14 High Noon
15 April Love
16 Where Is Your Heart (Song From Moulin Rouge)
17 Three Coins In The Fountain
18 Tammy
19 Anna
20 Moonglow And The Theme From 'picnic'
21 Love Me Tender
22 Love Is A Many Splendored Thing
Francis, Connie - Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD) CD 3
01 O Suzanna
02 Red River Valley
03 Boll Weevil
04 True Love, True Love
05 Clementine
06 Aura Lee
07 Come On, Jerry (Timber)
08 Careless Love
09 Every Night (When The Sun Goes In)
10 She'll Be Comin' 'Round The Mountain
11 Beautiful Brown Eyes
12 On Top Of Old Smokey
13 Mcnamara's Band
14 Mother Machree
15 My Wild Irish Rose
16 Dear Old Donegal
17 Did Your Mother Come From Ireland7
18 Danny Boy
19 It's A Great Day For The Irish
20 Too-Ra-Loo-Ra-Loo-Ral (That's An Irish Lullaby)
21 How Can You Buy Killarney
22 How Are Things In Glocca Morra
23 When Irish Eyes Are Smiling
24 A Little Bit Of Heaven
Francis, Connie - Eight Classic Albums Vol.2 (4-CD) CD 4
01 Mister Twister
02 Teach Me How To Twist
03 Johnny Darlin'
04 Telephone Lover
05 Mommy Your Daughter's Falling In Love
06 Drop It Joe
07 Kiss 'N' Twist
08 I Won't Be Home To You
09 My Real Happiness
10 Ain't That Better Baby
11 Hey Ring-A-Ding
12 Does Ol' Broadway Ever Sleep
13 Second Hand Love
14 Someone Else's Boy
15 Together
16 Too Many Rules
17 He's My Dreamboat
18 Gonna Git That Man
19 Don't Break The Heart That Loves You
20 Pretty Little Baby
21 When The Boy In Your Arms Is The Boy In Your Heart
22 It Happened Last Night
23 Baby's First Christmas
24 Breakin' In A Brand New Broken Heart