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London By Night
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London By Night in Franklin, TN
Current price: $16.99

Barnes and Noble
London By Night in Franklin, TN
Current price: $16.99
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Size: CD
1958's
London By Night
is a typically high-class, high quality
Julie London
album. The
standards
and original tunes on the disc are strung together in such a way that they form a narrative of a lovelorn woman finding true love, getting dumped, and wandering around sadly until finding romantic redemption in the final song.
London
specialized in downbeat numbers and even the positive love songs are languid and moody, so they jibe well with the wrist-slashers that make up the majority of the album. Many of
's albums feature a song or two by her husband,
Bobby Troup
.
is no exception and it features two
Troup
originals: the opening track,
"Well, Sir,"
and
"Just the Way I Am,"
which closes with the emotionally naked line "What a fool I was to dream that someday you could love me just the way I am." It's to
's credit that she could deliver lines like this so convincingly when she was famous for her beauty. It also shows how 1950s audiences were dealing with the same issues of self-worth and esteem that modern ones are grappling with, and why classic albums such as
still have a place in music collections.
has been reissued on CD in Japan and in Britain as a budget-priced two-for-one, paired with the equally fine
About the Blues
. ~ Nick Dedina
London By Night
is a typically high-class, high quality
Julie London
album. The
standards
and original tunes on the disc are strung together in such a way that they form a narrative of a lovelorn woman finding true love, getting dumped, and wandering around sadly until finding romantic redemption in the final song.
London
specialized in downbeat numbers and even the positive love songs are languid and moody, so they jibe well with the wrist-slashers that make up the majority of the album. Many of
's albums feature a song or two by her husband,
Bobby Troup
.
is no exception and it features two
Troup
originals: the opening track,
"Well, Sir,"
and
"Just the Way I Am,"
which closes with the emotionally naked line "What a fool I was to dream that someday you could love me just the way I am." It's to
's credit that she could deliver lines like this so convincingly when she was famous for her beauty. It also shows how 1950s audiences were dealing with the same issues of self-worth and esteem that modern ones are grappling with, and why classic albums such as
still have a place in music collections.
has been reissued on CD in Japan and in Britain as a budget-priced two-for-one, paired with the equally fine
About the Blues
. ~ Nick Dedina
1958's
London By Night
is a typically high-class, high quality
Julie London
album. The
standards
and original tunes on the disc are strung together in such a way that they form a narrative of a lovelorn woman finding true love, getting dumped, and wandering around sadly until finding romantic redemption in the final song.
London
specialized in downbeat numbers and even the positive love songs are languid and moody, so they jibe well with the wrist-slashers that make up the majority of the album. Many of
's albums feature a song or two by her husband,
Bobby Troup
.
is no exception and it features two
Troup
originals: the opening track,
"Well, Sir,"
and
"Just the Way I Am,"
which closes with the emotionally naked line "What a fool I was to dream that someday you could love me just the way I am." It's to
's credit that she could deliver lines like this so convincingly when she was famous for her beauty. It also shows how 1950s audiences were dealing with the same issues of self-worth and esteem that modern ones are grappling with, and why classic albums such as
still have a place in music collections.
has been reissued on CD in Japan and in Britain as a budget-priced two-for-one, paired with the equally fine
About the Blues
. ~ Nick Dedina
London By Night
is a typically high-class, high quality
Julie London
album. The
standards
and original tunes on the disc are strung together in such a way that they form a narrative of a lovelorn woman finding true love, getting dumped, and wandering around sadly until finding romantic redemption in the final song.
London
specialized in downbeat numbers and even the positive love songs are languid and moody, so they jibe well with the wrist-slashers that make up the majority of the album. Many of
's albums feature a song or two by her husband,
Bobby Troup
.
is no exception and it features two
Troup
originals: the opening track,
"Well, Sir,"
and
"Just the Way I Am,"
which closes with the emotionally naked line "What a fool I was to dream that someday you could love me just the way I am." It's to
's credit that she could deliver lines like this so convincingly when she was famous for her beauty. It also shows how 1950s audiences were dealing with the same issues of self-worth and esteem that modern ones are grappling with, and why classic albums such as
still have a place in music collections.
has been reissued on CD in Japan and in Britain as a budget-priced two-for-one, paired with the equally fine
About the Blues
. ~ Nick Dedina
















