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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. For more refined results, use the filters on the left to find ...

  2. In 1938, Bailey had two number one hits with Red Norvo and His Orchestra. "Please Be Kind" reached number one on the Hit Parade chart on May 7. She also sang lead vocals with Norvo on "Says My Heart", which reached number one during the week of June 18, 1938.

  3. 18 feb 2020 · If you don't want to spend $500 on the 10-CD box, Bailey's complete Columbia recordings are available from Columbia/Legacy as digital downloads on a three-volume set here, here and here. Or there's Mildred Bailey: The Rockin' Chair Lady (on the British Retrospective label), a two-CD set featuring 52 of her songs recorded between 1929 and 1947 here.

    • 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
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  5. 24 mag 2014 · In 1938, Bailey had two number one hits with Red Norvo. “Please Be Kind” was number one for two weeks. She also sang lead vocals on “Says My Heart” by Red Norvo and his Orchestra, which was number one for four weeks on the pop charts.

  6. 23 giu 2019 · Bailey died of heart failure on December 12, 1951 at St. Francis Hospital, Poughkeepsie, New York. She was just 48 years old. In 1989, Bailey was inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame, and in 1994 a stamp was issued by the US Postal Service in Bailey’s honor. Three quarters of a century later, the august walls of the Metropolitan ...

  7. 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. It was performed as part of The Cotton Club Parade of 1938.