Find out the value of a Vinyl Record, CD, or Cassette, etc. Search within our Price Guide of Sold Auctions
Reel-to-reel: 2-TRACK - SARAH VAUGHAN - GREAT SONGS FROM HIT SHOWS - Mercury Reel To Reel Tape
86.00 USD
0.01 USD
09 Jan 2022
02 Jan 2022
32 bids
1495
127
United States
Very Good
Mercury
Jazz
1950s
Is this information accurate?
Is this Item a Fake or Counterfeit?
REELHIFI
Check out ReelHifi on You tube
7-1/2 IPS 2-TRACK REEL TAPE
MERCURY MDS2-1
SARAH VAUGHAN
GREAT SONGS FROM HIT SHOWS
**Nice box
Sarah Vaughn’s voice is not centered, it comes from somewhere between the phantom center channel and the right channel. That’s no big deal though, even for an obsessed audiophile like me.
Besides that minor quibble the sound quality of this 7-1/2 ips reel tape is quite excellent, including the stereo presentation.
This 2-track plays perfectly from start to finish. The tape is fresh; flat, shiny and supple. The tape is wound mostly flat on the original Mercury reel.
The tape is wound on the reel tail-out as all 2-track and quad tapes should be.
Please see the photos to check the condition of the very nice box and reel.
Sarah Vaughan Sings Broadway: Great Songs from Hit Shows is a 1958 studio album by Sarah Vaughan.
The album was arranged by Hal Mooney, supervised by Bob Shad.
Track Listing and Original Shows
- "A Tree in the Park” (Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart) - 2:43 - Peggy-Ann (1926)
- “Little Girl Blue" (Rodgers, Hart) - 3:51 - Jumbo (1935)
- “Comes Love” (Lew Brown, Charles Tobias, Sam H. Stept) - 2:34 - Yokel Boy (1939)
- “But Not for Me” (George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin) - 3:27 - Girl Crazy (1930)
- "Lucky in Love” (Ray Henderson, B.G. DeSylva, Brown) - 1:55 - Good News (1937)
- “Autumn in New York” (Vernon Duke) - 3:20 - Thumbs Up (1934)
- “It Never Entered My Mind" (Rodgers, Hart) - 3:42 - Higher and Higher (1940)
- “If This Isn’t Love” (Burton Lane, Yip Harburg) - 2:11 - Finian’s Rainbow (1947)
- “September Song” (Kurt Weill, Maxwell Anderson) - 3:04 - Knickerbocker Holiday (1938)
- “My Ship" (I. Gershwin, Weill) - 2:55 - Lady in the Dark (1941)
Sarah Lois Vaughan (March 27, 1924 – April 3, 1990) was an American jazz singer.
Nicknamed "Sassy” and “The Divine One”, she won four Grammy Awards, including the Lifetime Achievement Award. She was given an NEA Jazz Masters Award in 1989. Critic Scott Yanow wrote that she had "one of the most wondrous voices of the 20th century".
Parallels have been drawn between Vaughan's voice and that of opera singers. Jazz singer Betty Carter said that with training Vaughan could have "...gone as far as Leontyne Price.” Bob James, Vaughan's musical director in the 1960s said that "...the instrument was there. But the knowledge, the legitimacy of that whole world were not for her ... But if the aria were in Sarah's range she could bring something to it that a classically trained singer could not."
In a chapter devoted to Vaughan in his book Visions of Jazz, critic Gary Giddins described her as the "...ageless voice of modern jazz – of giddy postwar virtuosity, biting wit and fearless caprice". He concluded by saying that "No matter how closely we dissect the particulars of her talent ... we must inevitably end up contemplating in silent awe the most phenomenal of her attributes, the one she was handed at birth, the voice that happens once in a lifetime, perhaps once in several lifetimes."
Her obituary in The New York Times described her as a "singer who brought an operatic splendor to her performances of popular standards and jazz.” Jazz singer Mel Tormé said that she had "...the single best vocal instrument of any singer working in the popular field." Her ability was envied by Frank Sinatra who said, "Sassy is so good now that when I listen to her I want to cut my wrists with a dull razor." New York Times critic John S, Wilson said in 1957 that she possessed "what may well be the finest voice ever applied to jazz." It was close to its peak until shortly before her death at the age of 66. Late in life she retained a "youthful suppleness and remarkably luscious timbre" and was capable of the projection of coloratura passages described as "delicate and ringingly high".
Though usually considered a jazz singer, Vaughan avoided classifying herself as one. She discussed the term in a 1982 interview for Down Beat: I don't know why people call me a jazz singer, though I guess people associate me with jazz because I was raised in it, from way back. I'm not putting jazz down, but I'm not a jazz singer ... I've recorded all kinds of music, but (to them) I'm either a jazz singer or a blues singer. I can't sing a blues – just a right-out blues – but I can put the blues in whatever I sing.
In 1989, Vaughan's health began to decline, although she rarely revealed any hints of this in her performances. She canceled a series of engagements in Europe in 1989, citing the need to seek treatment for arthritis of the hand, although she was able to complete a series of performances in Japan. During a run at New York’s Blue Note Jazz Club in 1989, she was diagnosed with lung cancer and was too ill to finish the last day of what would turn out to be her final series of public performances.
Vaughan returned to her home in California to begin chemotherapy and spent her final months alternating stays in the hospital and at home. She grew weary of the struggle and demanded to be taken home, where at the age of 66 she died on the evening of April 3, 1990, while watching a television movie featuring her daughter.