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DISCID=d20a8210
DTITLE=Dean Martin / Dean Martin Sings
DYEAR=1953
DGENRE=Vocal
TTITLE0=Who's Your Little Who-Zis!
TTITLE1=I'm Yours
TTITLE2=I Feel A Song Comin' On
TTITLE3=Come Back To Sorrento
TTITLE4=Oh Marie
TTITLE5=With My Eyes Wide Open I'm Dreaming
TTITLE6=Just One More Chance
TTITLE7=Louise
TTITLE8=That's Amore
TTITLE9=I Feel Like A Feather In The Breeze
TTITLE10=When You're Smiling (The Whole World Smiles With You)
TTITLE11=A Girl Named Mary And A Boy Named Bill
TTITLE12=You're The Right One (Bonus Track)
TTITLE13=Blue Smoke (Bonus Track)
TTITLE14=Johnny Get Your Girl (Bonus Track)
TTITLE15=As You Are (Bonus Track)
EXTD=Dean Martin Sings\n2005 Collectors' Choice Music\n\nOriginally Re
EXTD=leased January 23, 1953\nCD Edition Released March 14, 2006\n\nAM
EXTD=G EXPERT REVIEW: Dean Martin had been recording singles and EPs f
EXTD=or more than six years when he stepped into the studio on Novembe
EXTD=r 20, 1952 to cut his first ten-inch, eight-song LP. Called Dean 
EXTD=Martin Sings, it featured songs from the Martin and Lewis film Th
EXTD=e Stooge, a near-drama about a singer who needs his comic partner
EXTD= more than he realizes, that was shot in 1951 but not released un
EXTD=til 1953. Only one song, "A Girl Named Mary and a Boy Named Bill,
EXTD=" was actually written for the score, which otherwise consisted o
EXTD=f semi-standards from the 1920s and '30s, notably "Just One More 
EXTD=Chance," best-known as a hit for Martin's primary influence, Bing
EXTD= Crosby, and "I Feel a Song Comin' On." The versatile Martin give
EXTD=s unusually chaste and precise readings of the songs, paying more
EXTD= attention to the material than he did when given less interestin
EXTD=g contemporary material for his singles. The result was a consist
EXTD=ent effort that suggested Martin had more to offer musically than
EXTD= just being Jerry Lewis' straight man. When the 12-inch LP began 
EXTD=to supplant the ten-inch version, Capitol added four songs previo
EXTD=usly released on singles, "Come Back to Sorrento (Torna A Surrien
EXTD=to)," "When You're Young," "Oh, Marie" and the hit "That's Amore,
EXTD=" and reissued this album in the 12-inch format. (Note: subtitled
EXTD= "Songs from the Paramount Picture the Stooge" on its ten-inch ve
EXTD=rsion, Dean Martin Sings is sometimes referred to as the original
EXTD= soundtrack album for The Stooge, but it actually consists of Mar
EXTD=tin's studio recordings of songs used in the film.)  -- William R
EXTD=uhlmann\n\nAmazon.com Product Description\nFirst released as a 10
EXTD=" LP in 1953, and as a 12" two years later, Dino's debut longplay
EXTD=er for Capitol featured seven songs from his hit film collaborati
EXTD=on with Jerry Lewis, "The Stooge," and was recorded in two sessio
EXTD=ns on a single day (they just don't make 'em like they used to)! 
EXTD=Includes Who's Your Little Who-zis; I'm Yours; I Feel a Song Comi
EXTD=n' On; Come Back to Sorrento; Oh Marie; With My Eyes Wide Open I'
EXTD=m Dreaming; Just One More Chance; Louise; That's Amore; I Feel Li
EXTD=ke a Feather in the Breeze; When You're Smiling; A Girl Named Mar
EXTD=y and a Boy Named Bill, and the bonus tracks Blue Smoke; Johnny G
EXTD=et Your Girl; As You Are', and the B-side to 'That's Amore', 'You
EXTD='re the Right One'. \n\nHalf.com Album Notes\nRecording informati
EXTD=on: 1953.\n\nRecorded in the early 1950s at the height of his fam
EXTD=e, this collection of pop favorites features Dean Martin beginnin
EXTD=g to develop the vocalizations of the permanently relaxed, bon vi
EXTD=vant character he would perfect a few years later. While both the
EXTD= songs and the orchestral arrangements are on the schmaltzy side,
EXTD= Martin's breezy good nature lifts material like "Who's Your Litt
EXTD=le Who-Zis!" and "Come Back to Sorrento" out of the ordinary, wit
EXTD=h an intimate delivery that flatters the ear, while he sounds mos
EXTD=t comfortable on the big band arrangements of songs like "Johnny 
EXTD=Get Your Girl," "You're the Right One," and "Louise."
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