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  1. Performance History Search | Carnegie Hall. Searches can be made by keywords, performers, composers, works, dates, and/or venues. Search results can be saved or shared through a link. The keyword filter will look for your search term anywhere in our database, including event notes.

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      Zankel Hall, the newest of Carnegie Hall’s three...

  2. Mildred Bailey (born Mildred Rinker; February 27, 1907 – December 12, 1951) was a Native American jazz singer during the 1930s, known as "The Queen of Swing", "The Rockin' Chair Lady" and "Mrs. Swing".

  3. 18. Feb. 2020 · The first and finest female singing voice during these bleak years was Mildred Bailey. A warm and upbeat swing-era beacon, she not only forged breaks for singers like Bing Crosby but also influenced a generation of singers who followed, including Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett and Rosemary Clooney.

    • Carnegie Hall Concert: December 25, 1938 Mildred Bailey1
    • Carnegie Hall Concert: December 25, 1938 Mildred Bailey2
    • Carnegie Hall Concert: December 25, 1938 Mildred Bailey3
    • Carnegie Hall Concert: December 25, 1938 Mildred Bailey4
    • Carnegie Hall Concert: December 25, 1938 Mildred Bailey5
  4. " I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart " is a 1938 composition by Duke Ellington, with lyrics added by Irving Mills, Henry Nemo and John Redmond. The song became a number one hit for Ellington in 1938. Other hit versions the same year were by Benny Goodman (with Martha Tilton singing), Connee Boswell, Hot Lips Page, and Mildred Bailey. [1] .

  5. 23. Juni 2019 · Mildred Bailey. Bailey, a fixture in many of America’s hottest jazz clubs, is perhaps less remembered today than many of her contemporaries. At the time of the Met Concert, she was considered by fans and music critics alike as the second-best female jazz singer in the world, just behind Billie Holiday.

  6. 6. Apr. 2014 · The eighth and final concert in this series took place December 25, 1938 and is released for the first time on this double-CD Carnegie Hall Concert. Deems Taylor is the narrator and emcee. His good-natured and often humorous comments are a major asset to the concert. Although most of the music is not jazz, there are exceptions. Artie ...

  7. eighth and final concert in this series took place December 25, 1938 and is released for the first time on this double-CD Carnegie Hall Concert. Deems Taylor is the narrator and emcee.