Patti Page Song Souvenir

Patti Page Song Souvenir is a Patti Page LP issued by Mercury Records in 1954 as catalog number MG-25187.[1] The orchestra was led by Jack Rael.[2]

Patti Page Song Souvenir
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 1954 (1954-10)
RecordedJune—July 1953
StudioFine Sound Studio, New York City
GenreTraditional pop
LabelMercury
Patti Page chronology
Patti Page Sings for Romance
(1954)
Patti Page Song Souvenir
(1954)
Just Patti
(1954)

Billboard reviewed the album on October 30, 1954 saying, inter alia,:

“Patti Page Sings for Romance – Patti Page Song Souvenir – Mercury 25185, 25187
... Both of these new LPs should appeal to her large teen-age following and to the older crowd as well. For both sets contain tunes of the 1934-’37 period, and Patti sings them all with warmth, feeling and style for which she has become known…Dealers should be able to move many of these sets between now and Christmas.”[3]

Track listing

Track listing for Patti Page Song Souvenir
Track number Title Songwriter(s) Length
A1Remember Me?Harry Warren / Al Dubin2:20
A2They Can't Take That Away from MeGeorge Gershwin / Ira Gershwin2:31
A3It's a Sin to Tell a LieBilly Mayhew2:22
A4Until The Real Thing Comes AlongAlberta Nichols / Mann Holiner / Sammy Cahn / Saul Chaplin / L.E. Freeman2:59
B1Red Sails in the SunsetHugh Williams / Jimmy Kennedy3:11
B2These Foolish ThingsHarry Link / Holt Marvell / Jack Strachey3:21
B3Stars Fell on AlabamaFrank Perkins / Mitchell Parish3:05
B4I'll String Along with YouHarry Warren / Al Dubin2:49
gollark: At worst I figure they'd probably manage to be off by a factor of two, which puts it at an upper bound of ~4%.
gollark: I actually expected it was *higher* than that, but apparently not?
gollark: I think it's around, what, 15%?
gollark: Huh, that's higher than I expected. Being LGBT isn't actually all that common in the general population, after all.
gollark: Mysterious.

References

  1. "Discogs.com". Discogs.com. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  2. "pattipage,net". pattipage.net. Retrieved May 22, 2020.
  3. "Billboard". October 30, 1954: 28. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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