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The Best of the Andrews Sisters: 20th Century Masters (Millennium Collection) |  | Artist: Andrew Sisters Label: Mca Category: Music
List Price: $11.98 Buy New: $5.57 as of 9/9/2010 12:51 CDT details You Save: $6.41 (54%)
New (20) Used (17) from $3.97
Seller: -importcds Rating: 16 reviews Sales Rank: 3870
Format: Original recording remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
UPC: 008811223021 EAN: 0008811223021 ASIN: B00004RCV6
Release Date: March 7, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen (Means You're Grand) | | • | Hold Tight (Want Some Sea Food) | | • | Beat Me Daddy, Eight To The Bar | | • | I'll Be With You In Apple Blossom Time | | • | Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy | | • | Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree (With Anyone Else But Me) | | • | Shoo-Shoo Baby | | • | Rum And Coca-Cola | | • | Near You | | • | I Wanna Be Loved | | • | Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive | | • | I Can Dream, Can't I? |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description No Description Available No Track Information Available Media Type: CD Artist: ANDREWS SISTERS Title: BEST OF ANDREWS SISTERS-MILLEN Street Release Date: 03/07/2000 Domestic Genre: NOSTALGIA
Amazon.com The oft-touted critical notion that pop music revivals are usually spawned by reactionary nostalgia founders miserably when trying to explain swing music's resurgence, a renaissance seen over by latter-day hipsters born three decades after the music's supposed demise. A better explanation can be found on this 12-track Andrews Sisters sampler: vibrant, sassy music that's influenced artists from Bette Midler to the Manhattan Transfer and beyond. Starting as purveyors of typically serene ballads in the late '30s, the Andrews' tight harmonies virtually became the nation's soundtrack during the war years when wed to swing (the era-defining "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy") and even influences as seemingly far afield as blues ("Shoo-Shoo Baby") and calypso ("Rum and Coca-Cola"). Culled mostly from their stellar '40s prime, this collection serves as a great introduction to a stellar career--and a fine rationale for swing's unexpected modern blossoming. --Jerry McCulley
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 16
You may wish to search further. July 26, 2010 Samuel Chell (Kenosha,, WI United States) My daughter recently discovered the Andrews Sisters, proclaiming them a highlight of her day as she listens to them on Sirius while driving home from work. In doing a search on Amazon, this is the first one that pops up: The Millennium Collection. Handsome packaging and a nice photo, but 12 tunes and less than 40 minutes is a complete recording these days by LP standards; as a CD it feels like half a program, even when limited to the most essential Andrews Sisters' hits. This may do as an introduction to the undeniably talented, infectious trio for the uninitiated, but those who are already fans of the group will no doubt appreciate more bang for their buck.
You could, in fact, opt for two movies featuring the girls with "buck" in the title: Abbot and Costello's "Buck Privates" (with the indispensable "Bounce Me Brother with a Solid Four") or "Private Buckaroo" (with the delightful but relatively scarce "Six Jerks in a Jeep" not to mention "Straighten Up and Fly Right"). But a quick glance at some other CD collections will reveal some with 2-3 discs with 2-3 times as many tunes at the same or lower price.
Great mix of music--I'd recommend it! May 10, 2010 A. Smith (Denver, CO) The CD has a nice mix of the Andrews Sisters' most popular songs from the day. It's my first CD of theirs, so I don't have a good reference, but I'd recommend it to anyone who likes their music.
Enjoyable as an Introduction to The Andrews Sisters February 18, 2010 Gary F. Taylor (Biloxi, MS USA) It will probably shock fans of Michael Jackson, The Beatles, and Elvis Presley, but many recording industry experts consider it likely that The Andrews sisters outsold all of them in the pre-rock era, when sheet music sales were factored into sales counts in a way that tended to undercut recording sales figures. Whatever the case, along with The Glenn Miller Orchestra and Bing Crosby, The Andrews Sisters--Patty, Maxene, and LaVerne--were easily the best-selling vocal group of the WWII era. They were young, energetic, and pretty; they sang like nobody's business; and during World War II they became the face and sound of America, touring tirelessly for the boys, their recordings carried from end of the earth to the other.
Originally from Minnesota, like many others the sisters (born between 1911 and 1918) began their career in immitation of the Boswell Sisters, a 1930s vocal trio. Over time they developed their own distinctive sound, with youngest sister Patty usually on lead vocal with Maxene and LaVerne tightly weaving their voices around hers. It was a perfect combination for the emerging "swing" sound of big dance bands--and in 1937 the sisters had the good fortune to be coaxed into recording a swing version of the Yiddish "Bei Mir Bistu Shein." The record was a massive hit and became the first gold record awarded to a female singing group. The Andrews Sisters were suddenly famous, and when the United States entered World War II their unabashed patriotism made them even more so.
The act faced a number of troubles over the years, not the least of which was what some have described as a general personality clash between Patty and Maxene that intensified with the passage of time. In the early 1950s Patty, who the public generally regarded as the "star singer" of the three, angered both Maxene and LaVern when she sued their parents' estate and broke up the act by signing a series of solo record deals. Although Patty had a fair success as a solo artist, and although Maxene and LaVerne had significant success as a duo, it soon became very apparent that the public preferred them as a trio. They reunited in 1956 and continued to perform and record with considerable success until LaVerne's death in 1967. Thereafter Patty and Maxene became increasingly incompatible, and although they had a Broadway success with OVER HERE, Patty's lawsuit against producers brought the show to an early and grinding halt. They would meet on at least two other occasions, but by and large the estrangement was complete. Although both pursued solo careers, "star singer" Patty had only minor success and gradually faded from the musical scene; Maxene, however, was a highly regarded nightclub, cabaret, and theatre performer until her death in 1995. Although reportedly distraught, Patty did not attend the funeral.
During the course of their career as a trio, The Andrews Sisters set a host of records that have remained unsurpassed to this day. They are the single best-selling female vocal group in recording history, charted 113 times (more times than Presley or The Beatles), appeared in seventeen films (more than any other singing group), and broke attendance records at virtually every venue they played. Although firm figures are hard to come by, it seems likely that they hold the record for live radio performances, and the same may be true of live television performances. And yet, for reasons that have never been entirely clear, about half of their Decca recordings (now owned by MCA) have never been re-released and have not been available since their original release. This may be due to the fact that the Andrews Sisters frequently recorded with the major swing bands of the day and there may be legal issues of ownership. That aside, when the Andrews Sisters sang with a major-name big band, they tended to reduce the band to back-up, a fact such bandleaders as Glenn Miller and Artie Shaw most emphatically did not like. As such, you rarely find Andrews Sisters vocals included in compilations of the big band sound.
Whatever the case, the simple fact is that virtually every Andrews Sisters collection includes more or less the same songs over and over again: "Bei Mir Bist du Schon," "Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree," "The Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," "Hold Tight," and the single best-selling recording of the World War II era, "Rum and Coca-Cola." Although double-disks offer a wider array, single disk 20th Century Masters Millennium Collection is pretty standard in content. In my experience the 20th Century Masters series is not notable for sound quality; even so, it seems to have done reasonably well by The Andrews Sisters. Granted, the recordings could use a remaster; there is a slight muddiness to several selections, a slightly sharp quality on others. All the same, the result is reasonable. A serious collector will no doubt find both collection and sound quality commonplace, but it is an extremely good place to begin. If you're mildly interested and looking for an inexpensive introduction, you're unlikely to do better--and you could do a whole lot worse.
GFT, Amazon Reviewer
Perfect therapy January 7, 2010 cooker 1 (NJ) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I am the caretaker of my 90 yr old mom. I bought this for pleasure for my mom who has dementia. I put the cd on and peeked in the door and saw my mom boppin to the music of her era. It was great to see her so lively. The cd's are of good quality and I am very happy with the purchase.
fine budget priced album January 11, 2008 Matthew G. Sherwin (last seen screaming at Amazon customer service) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
20th Century Masters: The Best of the Andrews Sisters is an excellent, budget priced CD that gives people an excellent introduction (or a brief retrospective of) the marvelous sounds of The Andrews Sisters. The Andrews Sisters were extremely popular in their day and this CD demonstrates why. They remain one of my favorite groups even today!
The CD starts off with their smash hit "Bei Mir Bist Du Schöen." The three sisters harmonize perfectly although, unfortunately, there is some surface noise on the track. At any rate, I think you'll like "Bei Mir Bist Du Schöen" very much. "Hold Tight (Want Some Sea Food)" has the sisters singing once again; and they never sounded better. They possessed an incredible ability to harmonize swing tunes and make them sound positively electric. Incredible!
"I'll Be With You In Apple Blossom Time" again has surface noise; but this romantic ballad is at its best when these three sisters sing it. "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" switches gears very quickly; this next tune on the album swings brightly and the sisters keep up a great, fast rhythm that impresses me very much.
"Rum And Coca-Cola" is a great Latin themed ballad that was very popular at the time; and this swingin' tune sounds as soft and romantic as silk when The Andrews Sisters perform it. Moreover, listen for "Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive" by Bing Crosby together with The Andrews Sisters. When Bing recorded with The Andrews Sisters there was always an excellent tune as the result of it; and "Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive" is certainly no exception.
The album ends with "I Can Dream, Can't I?" This sweet number gets the royal treatment and the strings enhance this ballad very well. The background chorus sounds great, too.
The liner notes aren't much but you buy the CD for the music anyhow. I do wish, however, that they had added a song or two--at 35 minutes the CD is a tad short.
In short, The Andrews Sisters really shine on this CD even with a bit of surface noise on a couple of the twelve tracks. This inexpensively priced collection should be enough to whet the appetite of newcomers to The Andrews Sisters; and fans on a budget will enjoy this CD, too.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 16
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