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| Fever, Is That All There Is, I'm A Woman, Pass Me By, Light Of Love, Hallelujah I Love Him So, Alright Okay You Win, Sweetheart, My Man, more. |
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| 1 Let's Do It (Let's Fall in Love) |
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| 2 Somebody Nobody Loves |
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| 3 Why Don't You Do Right? |
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| 4 On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe |
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| 5 It's Anybody's Spring |
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| 6 What More Can a Woman Do |
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| 7 You Was Right, Baby |
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| 8 Waiting for the Train to Come In |
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| 9 I Don't Know Enough About You |
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| 10 I Can See It Your Way |
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| 11 Baby, You Can Count on Me |
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| 12 It's a Good Day |
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| 13 A Nightingale Can Sing the Blues |
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| 14 He's Just My Kind |
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| 15 She Did'nt Say Yes |
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| 16 Birmingham Jail |
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| 17 Don't Be So Mean to Baby |
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| 18 Bluest Kind of Blues (Nuages) |
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| 19 Everything's Movin' Too Fast |
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| 20 Speaking of Angels |
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| 21 Chi-Baba Chi-Baba (My Bambino Go to Sleep) |
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| 22 Just an Old Love of Mine |
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| 23 Sugar |
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| 24 Golden Earrings |
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| 25 Why Don't You Do Right? |
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Album Review
Peggy Lee was a renaissance woman, a multi-talented singer and composer who achieved popular as well as critical success. Short of a complete recordings box set, "The Singles Collection" is the best Peggy Lee career anthology yet, and a big improvement over the oddly compiled and sequenced 1998 box set "Miss Peggy Lee". "The Singles Collection" isn't complete -- Lee released hundreds of singles -- and it doesn't come close to compiling all of her hits (in fact, it doesn't even compile all of her Top 10 hits), but it does offer a chronological journey through her catalog from her early days with Benny Goodman and Bob Crosby all the way up to the '70s when she recorded for A&M. Although Capitol Records produced the box set, the selections include cuts from other labels, including Lee's Decca Records period. Nearly half of the box's 110 tracks are new to CD, and collectors will appreciate the glimpse into the studio afforded by a handful of bonus tracks that include false starts and studio chatter. Lee may have enjoyed commercial success with "ethnic" novelties ("MaƱana" being the foremost example) and upbeat pop songs, but it is her interpretations of serious jazz and pop tunes that have made her a contender for the title of Best Vocalist of the 20th Century. "The Singles Collection" follows her artistic growth and demonstrates the breadth of her interpretive abilities, which gives a better picture of Lee's artistry than any single album or inferior anthology could do. ~ Greg Adams, All Music Guide
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Biography


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Other albums by: Peggy Lee |
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