Альбомы исполнителя
Loch Lomond-Greatest Hits 1937-1942
1998 · альбом
Highlights In Jazz
1996 · альбом
Sullivan Shakespeare Hyman
1993 · альбом
Spring Isn't Everything
1989 · альбом
Close as Pages in a Book
1987 · альбом
Good Morning, Life!
1985 · альбом
Maxine
1982 · альбом
Enjoy Yourself!
1981 · альбом
We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye
1978 · альбом
Say It with a Kiss
2023 · сборник
The Music You Need
2022 · альбом
Maxine's Finest Notes
2022 · альбом
World Broadcast Recordings 1940-41
2018 · альбом
The Great Songs from the Cotton Club
2016 · альбом
Together
2015 · альбом
A Tribute To Andy Razaf
2006 · альбом
Leonard Feather Presents Maxine Sullivan
1955 · альбом
Flow Gently, Sweet Rhythm
1956 · альбом
Maxine Sullivan, Vol. 2
1956 · альбом
Sweet and Gentle
1965 · сингл
Maxine Sullivan and Jack Teagarden
1965 · альбом
Похожие исполнители
Mildred Bailey
Исполнитель
Martha Tilton
Исполнитель
Lee Wiley
Исполнитель
Carol Sloane
Исполнитель
Dakota Staton
Исполнитель
Etta Jones
Исполнитель
Helen Merrill
Исполнитель
Annie Ross
Исполнитель
Jeri Southern
Исполнитель
Irene Kral
Исполнитель
Chris Connor
Исполнитель
Beverly Kenney
Исполнитель
Billy Eckstine
Исполнитель
Morgana King
Исполнитель
Dorothy Dandridge
Исполнитель
Sue Raney
Исполнитель
June Christy
Исполнитель
Joe Williams
Исполнитель
Ernestine Anderson
Исполнитель
Биография
A subtle and lightly swinging jazz singer, Maxine Sullivan's delivery was very likable, and she did justice to all of the lyrics she sang during her long career. After moving to New York, Sullivan sang during intermissions at the Onyx Club and was discovered by pianist Claude Thornhill. Thornhill recorded her with a sympathetic septet singing a couple of standards and two Scottish folk songs performed in swinging fashion -- "Annie Laurie" and "Loch Lomond." The latter became a big hit and Sullivan's signature song for the rest of her career. Future sessions found her singing vintage folk tunes such as "Darling Nellie Gray," "I Dream of Jeanie," "Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes" and "If I Had a Ribbon Bow." Even if lightning did not strike twice, she was now a popular attraction. She appeared briefly in the movie Going Places opposite Louis Armstrong and in the Broadway show Swingin' the Dream. From 1940-1942, Sullivan often sang with her husband, bassist John Kirby's Sextet, a perfect outlet for her cool sound. She starred for two years on a radio series, Flow Gently Sweet Rhythm; she had a reasonably successful solo career, and then in the mid-'50s (similar to Alberta Hunter) became a trained nurse. In 1968, the singer began making a comeback, performing at festivals and even playing a little bit of valve trombone and flügelhorn. Now married to pianist Cliff Jackson, Sullivan (whose style and appealing voice were unchanged from earlier years) sometimes appeared with the World's Greatest Jazz Band, and she recorded frequently. During her later period, she often sang with mainstream jazz groups, including Scott Hamilton's. Quite fittingly, the last song that she ever recorded in concert was the same as her first record, "Loch Lomond." Maxine Sullivan's earliest recordings are available on a Classics CD. A Tono LP has some of her mid-period recordings, and from 1969 on, she recorded for Monmouth Evergreen (reissued on Audiophile), Fat Cat Jazz, Riff, Kenneth, Stash, Atlantic, and Concord. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi