Song
|
Music by
|
Lyrics by
|
Recording date
|
Notes
|
A
|
"Abide with Me"
|
William H. Monk
|
Henry F. Lyte
|
July 11, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"Again"
|
Lionel Newman |
Dorcas Cochran
|
March 23, 1949 #1 Charted Hit in 1949
|
(with John Rarig's orch. and The Mellomen) several other versions charted; Doris Day's was highest-charting version at #2 on Billboard chart
|
"Ain't We Got Fun?"
|
Richard A. Whiting
|
Raymond B. Egan Gus Kahn
|
November 13, 1951 TOP 10 ALBUM IN 51
|
(duet with Danny Thomas, Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams
|
February 20, 1953
|
with the Norman Luboff Choir from the album By the Light of the Silvery Moon
|
"All Alone"
|
Irving Berlin
|
June 6, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"All I Do is Dream of You"
|
Nacio Herb Brown
|
Arthur Freed
|
May 2, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"All through the Day"
|
Jerome Kern
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
March 6, 1946 TOP 10 HIT IN 1946
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"Another Go Around"
|
Noël Regney Gloria Shayne
|
May 13, 1965
|
(with Mort Garson's orchestra)
|
"Anything You Can Do"
|
Irving Berlin
|
October 8, 1962
|
(duet with Robert Goulet) from the album Annie Get Your Gun
|
"Any Way the Wind Blows"
|
Joseph Hooven Marilyn Hooven
|
William Dunham
|
January 12, 1959 TOP 40 HIT
|
(with Frank DeVol's orchestra)
|
"Are You Lonesome Tonight?"
|
Lou Handman
|
Roy Turk
|
June 6, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"Aren't You Glad You're You?
|
Jimmy Van Heusen
|
Johnny Burke
|
September 15, 1945 TOP 10 CHARTED HIT
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown]
|
"As Long As He Needs Me"
|
Lionel Bart
|
October 29, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
"At Last"
|
Harry Warren
|
Mack Gordon
|
September 15, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"At the Café Rendezvous"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
May 13, 1949
|
(with John Rarig's orchestra)
|
"Au Revoir Is Goodbye with a Smile"
|
Mort Garson
|
Bob Hilliard
|
June 18, 1965
|
(with Mort Garson's orchestra)
|
"Autumn Leaves"
|
Joseph Kosma
|
French: Jacques Prévert English: Johnny Mercer
|
September 21, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
B
|
"Baby Doll"
|
Harry Warren
|
Johnny Mercer
|
September 12, 1951
|
(with Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"Be a Child at Christmas Time"
|
Martin Broones
|
William A. Luce
|
June 17, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"Before I Loved You"
|
Joan Whitney Alex Kramer
|
March 14, 1950
|
(with George Wyle orchestra)
|
"Be Mine Tonight (Noche De Ronda)"
|
Maria Teresa Lara
|
Spanish: Maria Teresa Lara English: Sunny Skylar
|
November 9, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"Be My Little Baby Bumble Bee"
|
Henry I. Marshall
|
Stanley Murphy
|
January 30, 1953
|
with the Norman Luboff Choir and Paul Weston's orchestra released both as a single and on the album By The Light Of The Silvery Moon
|
"Be Still and Know"
|
|
|
July 13, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"The Best Thing for You"
|
Irving Berlin
|
September 13, 1950
|
|
"Be True to Me (Sabor A Mi)"
|
Alarcon Carillo
|
Spanish: Alarcon Carillo English: Mel Mitchell
|
November 5, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"Bewitched, Bothered & Bewildered"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
May 13, 1949 #1 HIT
|
(with John Rarig's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams 1,000,000+ sales; #1 on Cash Box chart and in Australia
|
"The Black Hills of Dakota"
|
Sammy Fain
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
July 16, 1953
|
released both as a single (#7 in the U.K.) and on the album, Calamity Jane
|
"Blame My Absent-Minded Heart"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
April 15, 1949
|
(with John Rarig's orchestra)
|
"Bless This House"
|
Helen Taylor May H. Morgan
|
July 13, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"Bluebird on Your Windowsill"
|
Elizabeth Clarke Robert Mellin
|
September 14, 1949
|
(with George Siravo orchestra)
|
"Blues in the Night"
|
Harold Arlen
|
Johnny Mercer
|
November 19, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"The Blue Train"
|
Jim Harbert Paul Manning
|
January 25, 1950
|
(with Jim Harbert's orchestra)
|
"Bright and Shiny"
|
Bob Sherman Dick Sherman
|
December 23. 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"A Bushel and a Peck"
|
Frank Loesser
|
September 13, 1950 TOP 20 HIT IN 1950
|
(with David Rose's orchestra)
|
"But Beautiful"
|
Jimmy Van Heusen
|
Johnny Burke
|
September 26, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
"But Not for Me"
|
George Gershwin
|
Ira Gershwin
|
September 26, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
"By the Light of the Silvery Moon"
|
Gus Edwards
|
Edward Madden
|
February 13, 1953
|
with the Norman Luboff Choir from the album of the same name
|
C
|
"Canadian Capers"
|
Gus Chandler Bert White Henry Cohen
|
January 7, 1949 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with John Rarig's orchestra) (see also "Cuttin' Capers" below)
|
"Candy Lips"
|
Fred Rose
|
December 5, 1952 TOP 20 HIT
|
(duet with Johnnie Ray, Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"Can't Help Falling in Love"
|
George David Weiss Hugo Peretti Luigi Creatore)
|
October 29, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
"Caprice"
|
Larry Marks
|
November 4, 1966
|
|
"Catch the Bouquet"
|
Fred Spielman |
Hans Haller
|
May 13, 1965
|
(with Mort Garson's orchestra)
|
"Cheek to Cheek"
|
Irving Berlin
|
October 16, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"The Children's Marching Song (Nick Nack Paddy Whack)"
|
traditional
|
July 14, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
"A Chocolate Sundae on a Saturday Night"
|
Hal David Fred Wise Al Frisch
|
November 6, 1947
|
|
"Choo Choo Train (Ch-Ch-Foo)"
|
Marc Fontenoy
|
Marc Fontenoy Jack Lawrence
|
1953[1]
|
|
"Christmas Present"
|
Sydney Robin
|
June 18, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire)"
|
Mel Tormé
|
Bob Wells
|
August 29, 1946
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
June 16, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"Christmas Story"
|
Walsh
|
|
September 11, 1950
|
released both as single and on the album On Moonlight Bay
|
"The Christmas Waltz"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
June 18, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"The Circus is on Parade"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
1962
|
(with Jimmy Durante and Martha Raye) from Billy Rose's Jumbo
|
"Clap Yo' Hands"
|
George Gershwin
|
Ira Gershwin
|
December 19, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"Close Your Eyes"
|
Bernice Petkere
|
August 27, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
December 16, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Trio) from the album Duet
|
"The Comb and Paper Polka"
|
Hugo Hollander Michael Feahy
|
August 31, 1950
|
(with Frank Yankovic & his Yanks)
|
"Come to Baby, Do!"
|
Inez James Sidney Miller
|
September 6, 1945 Hit the charts at #13
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
September 21, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"Confess"
|
Bennie Benjamin George David Weiss
|
November 21, 1947 TOP 10 HIT B/W LOVE SOMEBODY
|
(duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo orchestra) (also done by Patti Page)
|
"Control Yourself"
|
André Previn
|
Dory Langdon Previn
|
November 30, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"Crazy Rhythm"
|
Joseph Meyer Roger Wolfe Kahn Irving Caesar
|
July 25, 1950
|
(duet with Gene Nelson & The Page Cavanaugh Trio) released both as single and on the album Tea for Two
|
"Cuddle up a Little Closer"
|
Karl Hoschna
|
Otto Harbach
|
March 30, 1951
|
(with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as single and on the album On Moonlight Bay
|
"Cuttin' Capers"
|
Gus Chandler Bert White Henry Cohen
|
Earl Burnett Ralph Blane Harry Warren
|
November 29, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
D
|
"Daffa Down Dilly"
|
Jim Harbert Charlene Harbert
|
January 25, 1960
|
(with Jim Harbert's orchestra)
|
"Dansero"
|
Richard Hayman Lee Daniels Sol Parker
|
November 9, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"Darn That Dream"
|
Jimmy Van Heusen
|
Eddie De Lange
|
May 26, 1950
|
from the album Day Dreams
|
"Day by Day"
|
Axel Stordahl Paul Weston
|
Sammy Cahn
|
January 16, 1946
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)#15 on charts
|
September 21, 1956
|
from the album of the same name
|
"Daydreaming"
|
André Previn
|
Dory Langdon Previn
|
December 16, 1961
|
(with André Previn's orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"The Deadwood Stage (Whip-Crack-Away)"
|
|
|
August 27, 1953
|
released both as a single and on the album, Calamity Jane
|
"Deck the Halls with Boughs of Holly"
|
|
|
June 10, 1959
|
(with Frank De Vol's orchestra) unreleased until its inclusion on the Bear Family box set Que Sera, Sera in 1996
|
"The Deevil, Devil, Divil"
|
Carl Sigman
|
Bob Russell Lee Kaydan
|
March 27, 1946
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"Do Do Do"
|
George Gershwin
|
Ira Gershwin
|
July 14, 1950
|
(with Axel Stordahl's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Tea for Two
|
"Doin' What Comes Naturally"
|
Irving Berlin
|
October 8, 1962
|
from the album Annie Get Your Gun
|
"Domino"
|
Louis Ferrari
|
French: Jacques Plante English: Don Raye
|
October 4, 1951
|
(with Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"Do Not Disturb"
|
Ben Raleigh
|
Mark Barkan
|
June 18, 1965
|
(with Mort Garson's orchestra)
|
"Don't Take Your Love From Me"
|
Henry Nemo
|
September 17, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
"Do Re Mi"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II)
|
July 14, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
"Dream a Little Dream of Me"
|
Officially credited to Fabian Andre and Wilbur Schwandt; claimed by Milton Adolphus in some sources
|
Gus Kahn
|
August 23, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
E
|
"Easy to Love"
|
Cole Porter
|
November 12, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)"
|
Carl Sigman
|
Herb Magidson
|
January 13, 1950 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with George Wyle's orchestra)
|
"The Everlasting Arms"
|
Martin Broones
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
September 11, 1950
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir)
|
December 22, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
"Everybody Loves a Lover"
|
Robert Allen
|
Richard Adler
|
May 12, 1958 TOP 10 HIT
|
(with Frank DeVol's orchestra)
|
"Everybody Loves My Baby"
|
Jack Palmer
|
Spencer Williams
|
November 18, 1954
|
from the album Love Me or Leave Me
|
"Every Little Movement (Has a Meaning All Its Own)"
|
Karl Hoschna
|
Otto Harbach
|
March 30, 1951
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir and Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay
|
"Every Now and Then (You Come Around)"
|
Eddie Snyder Richard Ahlert
|
January 21, 1966
|
(with Mort Garson's orchestra)
|
"Everywhere You Go"
|
Larry Shay Mark Fisher
|
Joe Goodwin
|
March 23, 1949
|
(with the Mellomen and John Rarig's orchestra)
|
F
|
"A Faded Summer Love"
|
Phil Baxter
|
June 6, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"Falling"
|
Bruce Johnston Don Wyatt
|
January 25, 1960
|
(with Jim Harbert's orchestra)
|
"Falling in Love Again"
|
Frederick Hollander
|
Sammy Lerner
|
December 16, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"A Fellow Needs a Girl"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
December 11, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
"Fine and Dandy"
|
Kay Swift
|
Paul James (James Warburg)
|
December 8, 1950
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway
|
"Fit as a Fiddle (And Ready for Love)"
|
Arthur Freed Al Goodhart (or Goodheart)
|
November 18, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"Fly Me to the Moon (In Other Words)"
|
Bart Howard
|
November 5, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"A Foggy Day"
|
George Gershwin
|
Ira Gershwin
|
October 29, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear to Tread)"
|
Rube Bloom
|
Johnny Mercer
|
December 16, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"For All We Know"
|
J. Fred Coots
|
Sam M. Lewis
|
June 9, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"A Full Time Job"
|
Gerry Teifer
|
October 16, 1952 TOP 20 HIT in U.S.; #11 in U.K.
|
(duet with Johnnie Ray, Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"Funny"
|
Hal Shaper Antonio DeVito Giorgio Calabrese
|
November 5, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
G
|
"The Game of Broken Hearts"
|
Don Larkin Sally Clark Eddie McMullen
|
October 19, 1949
|
(as "Doris Day with her Country Cousins")
|
"Gently Johnny"
|
Kay Twomey Fred Wise Ben Weisman
|
February 9, 1952
|
(duet with Guy Mitchell, Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"Get Out and Get Under the Moon"
|
Larry Shay
|
Charles Tobias William Jerome
|
November 25, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"Getting to Know You"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II)
|
July 7, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
"Give a Little Whistle"
|
Leigh Harline
|
Ned Washington
|
July 10, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
"Give Me Time"
|
Alec Wilder
|
December 16, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"The Glass Bottom Boat"
|
Joe Lubin
|
January 21, 1966
|
(with Mort Garson's orchestra)
|
"Gone with the Wind"
|
Allie Wrubel
|
Herbert Magidson
|
September 17, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
"Gotta Feelin'"
|
|
|
December 23, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"A Guy Is a Guy"
|
Oscar Brand
|
July 2, 1952 #1 on Billboard chart; #2 on Cash Box chart; MILLION SELLER
|
(with Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"The Gypsy in My Soul"
|
Clay Boland
|
Moe Jaffe
|
September 17, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
H
|
"Happy Talk"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
December 19, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas"
|
Hugh Martin Ralph Blane
|
June 16, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"He'll Have to Cross the Atlantic"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
May 17, 1945
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"Hello, My Lover, Goodbye"
|
John W. Green
|
Edward Heyman
|
September 21, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
"Here in My Arms"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
July 14, 1950
|
(with Axel Stordahl's orchestra) released both as single and on the album Tea for Two
|
"Here We Go Again"
|
Joe Seneca
|
January 25, 1960
|
(with Jim Harbert's orchestra)
|
"He's Home For a Little While"
|
Ted Shapiro
|
Kermit Goell
|
February 1, 1945
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"He's So Married"
|
Jimmie Dodd
|
Will Fowler
|
August 15, 1958
|
with Frank De Vol and his Orchestra
|
"Hey There"
|
Jerry Ross
|
Richard Adler
|
NEVER RELEASED AS A SINGLE; briefly featured in film, PAJAJA GAME;
|
|
"High Hopes"
|
Jimmy Van Heusen
|
Sammy Cahn
|
July 14, 1964 FEATURED IN THE FILM, "ANTZ"
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
"Hold Me in Your Arms"
|
Ray Heindorf Don Pippin
|
Charles Henderson
|
September 24, 1954
|
from the album Young at Heart
|
"Hoop-Dee-Doo"
|
Milton De Lugg
|
Frank Loesser
|
March 14, 1950 #4 on Cash Box chart; #17 on Billboard chart
|
(with the Mellomen and George Wyle's orchestra)
|
"Hooray for Hollywood"
|
Richard A. Whiting
|
Johnny Mercer
|
November 19, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"How Insensitive"
|
Antônio Carlos Jobim
|
Portuguese: Vinícius de Moraes English: Norman Gimbel
|
November 9, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"A Hundred Years from Today"
|
Victor Young
|
Ned Washington Joe Young
|
December 17, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
I
|
"I Believe in Dreams"
|
Jim Harbert
|
May 3, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"I Can Do Without You"
|
|
|
August 5, 1953
|
(duet with Howard Keel) from the album, Calamity Jane
|
"I Didn't Know What Time It Was"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
June 17, 1949
|
from the album Day Dreams
|
"I Didn't Slip, I Wasn't Pushed, I Fell"
|
George Wyle
|
Edward Pola
|
March 14, 1950 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with the Mellomen, George Wyle orchestra)
|
"I Don't Wanna Be Kissed (By Anyone But You)"
|
Harold Spina
|
Jack Elliott
|
November 30, 1949
|
(with George Siravo orchestra)
|
"I Don't Want to Walk Without You"
|
Jule Styne
|
Frank Loesser
|
1965
|
(medley with "I Had the Craziest Dream") from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"I Feel Like a Feather in the Breeze"
|
Harry Revel
|
Mack Gordon
|
November 29, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"If I Can Help Somebody"
|
A. Bazel Androzzo
|
July 12, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"If I Could Be with You"
|
James P. Johnson
|
Henry Creamer
|
|
from the album Day Dreams
|
"If I Give My Heart to You"
|
Jimmy Brewster Jimmie Crane Al Jacobs
|
July 27, 1954 #2 on Cash Box chart; #3 on Billboard chart; #4 in U.K.
|
(with The Mellomen, Frank De Vol's orchestra) (also done by Denise Lor)
|
"If I Had My Life to Live Over"
|
Larry Vincent Henry Tobias Moe Jaffe
|
May 25, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"If I Were a Bell"
|
Frank Loesser
|
September 28, 1950 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with George Siravo orchestra)
|
"If You Were the Only Girl"
|
Nat D. Ayer
|
Clifford Grey
|
January 30, 1953
|
from the album By the Light of the Silvery Moon
|
"If You Will Marry Me"
|
Roz Gordon
|
December 15, 1948
|
(with Buddy Clark, Mitchell Ayres' orchestra)
|
"I Got Lost in His Arms"
|
Irving Berlin
|
October 8, 1962
|
from the album Annie Get Your Gun
|
"I Got the Sun in the Morning"
|
Irving Berlin
|
March 27, 1946 TOP 10 HIT
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)Charted at #2
|
1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
October 8, 1962
|
from the album Annie Get Your Gun
|
"I Hadn't Anyone Till You"
|
Ray Noble
|
September 26, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
"I Had the Craziest Dream"
|
Harry Warren
|
Mack Gordon
|
November 5, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
September 21, 1964
|
(medley with "I Don't Want to Walk Without You") from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"I Have Dreamed"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
May 5, 1961
|
from the album of the same name
|
"I Know That You Know"
|
Vincent Youmans
|
Anne Caldwell
|
July 25, 1950
|
(duet with Gene Nelson & The Page Cavanaugh Trio) released both as a single and on the album Tea for Two
|
"I'll Always Be with You"
|
Marjorie Goetschius Edna Osser
|
February 7, 1945
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"I'll Be Around"
|
Alec Wilder
|
May 26, 1950 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with Axel Stordahl's orchestra)
|
"I'll Be Home for Christmas"
|
Walter Kent
|
June 18, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"I'll Buy That Dream"
|
Allie Wrubel
|
Herb Magidson
|
May 2, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"I'll Forget You"
|
Ernest R. Ball Annelu Burns
|
January 30, 1953
|
from the album By the Light of the Silvery Moon
|
"I'll Never Slip Around Again"
|
Floyd Tillman
|
October 19, 1949
|
(as "Doris Day with her Country Cousins")
|
"I'll Never Smile Again"
|
Ruth Lowe
|
September 15, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"I'll Never Stop Loving You"
|
Nicholas Brodzsky
|
Sammy Cahn
|
December 1, 1954 TOP 10 HIT; Oscar-nominated
|
(with Percy Faith's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Love Me or Leave Me 1,000,000+ sales
|
"I'll Remember April"
|
Gene DePaul
|
Patricia Johnston Don Raye
|
October 22, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"I'll See You in My Dreams"
|
Isham Jones
|
Gus Kahn
|
November 13, 1951 TOP 10 ALBUM HIT
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir, Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album of the same name
|
"I'll String Along with You"
|
Harry Warren
|
Al Dubin
|
December 28, 1948
|
(duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo orchestra)
|
"I Love Paris"
|
Cole Porter
|
February 11, 1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
"I Love the Way You Say Goodnight"
|
George Wyle
|
Edward Pola
|
August 21, 1950 TOP 30 HIT
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway
|
"Imagination"
|
Jimmy Van Heusen
|
Johnny Burke
|
December 2, 1947
|
(with George Siravo orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Day Dreams
|
"I'm an Indian Too"
|
Irving Berlin
|
October 8, 1962
|
from the album Annie Get Your Gun
|
"I May Be Wrong (But I Think You're Wonderful)"
|
Henry Sullivan |
Harry Ruskin
|
January 25, 1950
|
(with Harry James orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Young Man with a Horn
|
"I'm Beginning to Miss You"
|
Irving Berlin
|
December 29, 1948
|
(with John Rarig's orchestra)
|
"I'm Beginning to See the Light"
|
Duke Ellington Don George Johnny Hodges Harry James
|
September 21, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)"
|
Doc Daugherty Al J. Neiburg Ellis Reynolds
|
June 17, 1949
|
(with John Rarig's orchestra and The Mellomen) released both as a single and on the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams
|
"I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles"
|
John Kellette
|
"Jaan Kenbrovin" (James Kendis, James Brockman, and Nat Vincent)
|
March 30, 1951
|
(duet with Jack Smith and the Norman Luboff Choir) released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay
|
"I'm In Love"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
July 7, 1948 from her first film, ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS
|
(duet with Buddy Clark)
|
"I'm in the Mood for Love"
|
Jimmy McHugh
|
Dorothy Fields
|
1952
|
"I'm Not at All in Love"
|
Jerry Ross
|
Richard Adler
|
June 14, 1957
|
from the album The Pajama Game
|
"I'm Still Sitting under the Apple Tree"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
June 11, 1947
|
|
"I'm Sitting on Top of the World"
|
Ray Henderson
|
Sam M. Lewis Joe Young
|
November 29, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"In a Shanty in Old Shanty Town"
|
Ira Schuster Jack Little
|
Joe Young
|
December 8, 1950
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway
|
"The Inch-worm"
|
Frank Loesser
|
July 10, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
"I Need Thee Every Hour"
|
|
|
July 11, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"In the Garden" |
|
C. Austin Miles
|
July 12, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"In the Moon Mist"
|
|
Jack Lawrence
|
January 16, 1946
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"In the Still of the Night"
|
Cole Porter
|
October 22, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"Instant Love"
|
M. Drake, Spielman
|
|
May 12, 1958
|
Single. Frank De Vol and His Orchestra. Instant Love was the B-side to Everybody Loves a Lover
|
"I Only Have Eyes for You"
|
Harry Warren
|
Al Dubin
|
July 14, 1950
|
(with Axel Stordahl's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Tea for Two
|
"I Remember You"
|
Victor Schertzinger
|
Johnny Mercer
|
September 21, 1956 CONSIDERED DORIS DAY BEST RECORDED SONG
|
from the album Day by Day
|
September 11, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"I Said My Pajamas (and Put on My Pray'rs)"
|
George Wyle
|
Edward Pola
|
January 13, 1950 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with George Wyle orchestra)
|
"I See Your Face Before Me"
|
Arthur Schwartz
|
Howard Dietz
|
August 23, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
"It All Depends on You"
|
Ray Henderson
|
Buddy G. DeSylva Lew Brown
|
December 7, 1954
|
from the album Love Me Or Leave Me
|
"It Could Happen to You"
|
Jimmy Van Heusen
|
Johnny Burke
|
1946 TOP 10 HIT
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
September 11, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"It Had to Be You"
|
Isham Jones
|
Gus Kahn
|
November 9, 1951
|
(with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams
|
"It Happened at the Festival of Roses"
|
Al Goodhart (or Goodheart) Dick Manning
|
September 14, 1949
|
(with George Siravo orchestra)
|
"It Might as Well Be Spring"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
October 22, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"It's a Great Feeling"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
May 13, 1949 TOP 30 HIT; Oscar-nominated
|
(with the Mellomen and John Rarig's orchestra)
|
"It's a Lovely Day Today"
|
Irving Berlin
|
September 28, 1950
|
(with George Siravo orchestra)
|
"It's a Quiet Town in Cross-Bone County"
|
Harold Spina
|
Bob Russell
|
December 29, 1947
|
(with The Modernaires)
|
"It's Been a Long, Long Time"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
September 15, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"It's Better to Conceal Than Reveal"
|
Leo Robin
|
May 15, 1949
|
(duet with Dinah Shore, Hugo Winterhalter's orchestra)
|
"It's Easy to Remember"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
October 22, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"It's Magic"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
November 12, 1947 from ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS
|
(with George Siravo orchestra) 1,000,000+ sales; #2 on Billboard chart, Oscar-nominated
|
June 4, 1952
|
with Percy Faith and his Orchestra on the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"It's the Sentimental Thing to Do"
|
Marvin Fisher
|
Roy Alfred
|
December 2, 1947
|
|
"It's You or No One"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
July 7, 1948 from ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS
|
|
"It Takes Time"
|
Arthur Korb
|
February 27, 1947 FIRST RECORDED SINGLE FOR COLUMBIA RECORDS/BACKED WITH "PETE"
|
|
"I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm"
|
Irving Berlin
|
October 16, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"I've Grown Accustomed to His Face"
|
Frederick Loewe
|
Alan Jay Lerner
|
February 18, 1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
"I've Never Been in Love Before"
|
Frank Loesser
|
September 13, 1950 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with David Rose's orchestra)
|
"I've Only Myself to Blame"
|
Redd Evans Dave Mann
|
December 2, 1947
|
(with George Siravo orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Day Dreams
|
"I Want to Be Happy"
|
Vincent Youmans
|
Irving Caesar
|
July 25, 1950
|
(with The Page Cavanaugh Trio) released both as a single and on the album Tea for Two
|
December 20, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"I Wish I Had a Girl"
|
Grace Leboy Kahn
|
Gus Kahn
|
November 13, 1951
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir) released both as a single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams
|
J
|
"Julie"
|
Leith Stevens
|
Tom Adair
|
August 10, 1956 TOP 40 HIT/NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARD
|
title theme from the film of the same name, starring Doris Day and Louis Jourdan
|
"Just an Old Love of Mine"
|
Dave Barbour Peggy Lee
|
June 11, 1947
|
|
"Just Blew in from the Windy City"
|
Sammy Fain
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
July 16, 1953
|
from the album, Calamity Jane
|
"Just One Girl"
|
Lyn Udall
|
Karl Kennett
|
February 13, 1953
|
with the Norman Luboff Choir from the album By The Light Of The Silvery Moon
|
"Just One of Those Things"
|
Cole Porter
|
December 4, 1950
|
(with the Frank Comstock orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway
|
1954
|
from the album Young at Heart
|
K
|
"Keep Smilin', Keep Laughin', Be Happy"
|
|
|
December 23, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"King Chanticleer"
|
Nat D. Ayer |
Seymour Brown
|
January 30, 1953
|
with the Norman Luboff Choir from the album By the Light of the Silvery Moon
|
L
|
"The Lady's in Love with You"
|
Burton Lane
|
Frank Loesser
|
November 13, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"The Lamp Is Low"
|
Peter de Rose Bert Shefter based on a composition by Maurice Ravel
|
Mitchell Parish
|
August 30, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
"The Last Mile Home"
|
Walter Kent Walton Farrar
|
June 24, 1949
|
(with John Rarig's orchestra)
|
"The Last Time I Saw You"
|
Marjorie Goetschius Edna Osser
|
September 15, 1945
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
June 18, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"Let Me Call You Sweetheart"
|
Leo Friedman
|
Beth Slater Whitson
|
May 25, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"Let No Walls Divide"
|
Martin Broones
|
William A. Luce
|
May 3, 1961
|
from the album An All Star Christmas: "We Wish You the Merriest"
|
"Let the Little Girl Limbo"
|
Barry Mann Cynthia Weil
|
March 11, 1963 NEVER RELEASED
|
(with Jack Nitzsche's orchestra) not released in US until compiled in a CD album called The 1960s Singles in 2002
|
"Let's Face the Music and Dance"
|
Irving Berlin
|
October 16, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"Let's Fly Away"
|
Cole Porter
|
November 13, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"Let's Take an Old-Fashioned Walk"
|
Irving Berlin
|
May 6, 1949 TOP 20 HIT
|
(duet with Frank Sinatra, Ken Lane Singers, Axel Stordahl's orchestra)
|
"Let's Take a Walk Around the Block"
|
Harold Arlen
|
Ira Gershwin Edgar Yipsel Harburg
|
November 18, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"Let's Walk That-a-Way"
|
Kay Twomey Fred Wise Ben Weisman
|
December 5, 1952
|
(duet with Johnnie Ray, Paul Weston's orchestra)#4 hit in U.K. 1953
|
"Life Is Just a Bowl of Cherries"
|
Ray Henderson
|
Buddy G. DeSylva Lew Brown
|
May 25, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"The Lilac Tree"
|
George H. Gartlan
|
July 14, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
"Little Girl Blue"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
1962
|
from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo
|
"A Little Kiss Goodnight"
|
Bob Merrill
|
February 9, 1952 TOP 20 HIT
|
(duet with Guy Mitchell, Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"A Load of Hay"
|
Michael Feahy Howard Barnes Ethelbert Nevin
|
August 21, 1950
|
(with The Page Cavanaugh Trio)
|
"Lollipops and Roses"
|
Tony Velona
|
October 29, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
"The Lord's Prayer"
|
|
|
July 11, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"Losing You"
|
Jean Renard |
Carl Sigman
|
October 29, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
"Love Him"
|
Barry Mann Cynthia Weil
|
November 5, 1963
|
from the album of the same name
|
"Love Is Here to Stay"
|
George Gershwin
|
Ira Gershwin
|
November 1, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"Love Me in the Daytime"
|
|
|
January 12, 1959; TOP 40 HIT
|
RELEASED as a single following minor hit on ANYWAY THE WIND BLOWS;
|
"Love Me or Leave Me"
|
Walter Donaldson
|
Gus Kahn
|
December 7, 1954 Top 20 hit in the U.K.; #1 TOP SELLING LP OF 1955 in U.S.
|
from the album of the same name
|
"Lover Come Back"
|
Alan Spilton Frank DeVol
|
November 21, 1961
|
(with Frank DeVol's orchestra)
|
"Love Somebody"
|
Joan Whitney Alex Kramer
|
November 21, 1947
|
(duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo orchestra) 1,000,000+ sales #1 HIT RECORD
|
"Love Ya"
|
Peter De Rose
|
Charles Tobias
|
March 30, 1951
|
(duet with Jack Smith, Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay
|
"Lullaby of Broadway"
|
Harry Warren
|
Al Dubin
|
December 8, 1950
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir and the Buddy Cole Quartet) from the album of the same name
|
December 28, 1950
|
(with Harry James and his orchestra)
|
M
|
"Make Someone Happy"
|
Jule Styne
|
Adolph Green Betty Comden
|
December 20, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny with Neal Hefti and His Orchestra
|
"Makin' Whoopee!"
|
Walter Donaldson
|
Gus Kahn
|
November 9, 1951
|
(duet with Danny Thomas) released both as a single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams
|
November 25, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"Mama, What'll I Do"
|
Vaughn Horton
|
November 30, 1949
|
(with Ray Noble's orchestra)
|
"Ma Says, Pa Says"
|
Josef Marais
|
October 16, 1952 TOP 20 HIT
|
(duet with Johnnie Ray, Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"Mean to Me"
|
Fred E. Ahlert
|
Roy Turk
|
c. December 1954
|
from the album Love Me or Leave Me
|
"Meditation"
|
Antônio Carlos Jobim
|
Portuguese: Newton Mendonça English: Norman Gimbel
|
November 2, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"Me Too (Ho Ha! Ho Ha!)"
|
Harry M. Woods
|
Charles Tobias Al Sherman
|
November 29, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"Mister Tap Toe"
|
Terry Gilkyson Richard Dehr Frank Miller
|
October 16, 1952 TOP 10 HIT on Billboard chart
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir and Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"Mood Indigo"
|
Duke Ellington Irving Mills Barney Bigard
|
December 11, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
"Moonglow"
|
Will Hudson Irving Mills
|
Eddie De Lange
|
August 30, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
"Moonshine Lullaby"
|
Irving Berlin
|
October 8, 1962
|
from the album Annie Get Your Gun
|
"Moon Song"
|
Arthur Johnston
|
Sam Coslow
|
August 23, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
"More"
|
Riz Ortolani Nino Oliviero
|
Norman Newell
|
October 29, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
"The More I See You"
|
Harry Warren
|
Mack Gordon
|
September 21, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"Move Over, Darling"
|
Terry Melcher Hal Kantor Joe Lubin
|
August 30, 1963 TOP 50 HIT (#8 IN THE UK)
|
(with Jack Nitsche's orchestra)
|
"My Buddy"
|
Walter Donaldson
|
Gus Kahn
|
November 9, 1951
|
(with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams
|
"My Darling, My Darling"
|
Frank Loesser
|
October 5, 1948 #7 on Billboard chart
|
(duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo orchestra) biggest-selling version was by Jo Stafford and Gordon MacRae
|
"My Dream Is Yours"
|
Harry Warren
|
Ralph Blane
|
April 19, 1949 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with George Siravo orchestra)
|
"My Dreams Are Getting Better All The Time"
|
Vic Mizzy
|
Manny Curtis
|
April 25, 1945 #1 HIT
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown) 1,000,000+ sales
|
"My Kinda Love"
|
Louis Alter
|
Jo Trent
|
December 17, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
"My Love and Devotion"
|
Milton Carson
|
1952 #10 UK HIT
|
(with Percy Faith's orchestra)
|
"My Number One Dream Came True"
|
Les Brown
|
Bud Green
|
June 20, 1946
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"My Ship"
|
Kurt Weill
|
Ira Gershwin
|
May 3, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"My One and Only Love"
|
Guy Wood
|
Robert Mellin
|
December 16, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"My Romance"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
1962
|
from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo
|
"My Young and Foolish Heart"
|
Al Lewis Murray Mencher Charles Tobias
|
February 27, 1947
|
|
N
|
"Nearer My God to Thee"
|
Lowell Mason
|
Sarah F. Adams
|
July 11, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"Never Look Back"
|
Chilton Price
|
December 4, 1954
|
released both as single and on the album Love Me or Leave Me
|
"Nice Work if You Can Get It"
|
George Gershwin
|
Ira Gershwin
|
October 16, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"Night and Day"
|
Cole Porter
|
November 19, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"Night Life"
|
Willie Nelson Paul Buskirk Walt Breeland
|
November 5, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
"The Night We Called it A Day"
|
Matt Dennis
|
Tom Adair
|
August 30, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
"Nobody's Heart"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
November 30, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"Nobody's Sweetheart"
|
Elmer Schoebel Billy Meyers
|
Ernie Erdman Gus Kahn
|
November 13, 1951
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir) released both as single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams
|
"No Two People"
|
Frank Loesser
|
August 4, 1952 TOP 20 HIT
|
(duet with Donald O'Connor, Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"Not Only Should You Love Him"
|
Leo Robin
|
December 22, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
"(Now & Then There's) A Fool Such as I"
|
Bill Trader
|
November 5, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
"(Where Are you ) Now That I Need You"
|
Frank Loesser
|
March 23, 1949 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with The Mellomen)
|
O
|
"Oh, But I Do"
|
Arthur Schwartz
|
Leo Robin
|
November 5, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"Oh, How I Miss You Tonight"
|
Joe Burke Mark Fisher
|
Benny Davis
|
June 9, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"Ohio"
|
Leonard Bernstein
|
Betty Comden Adolph Green
|
February 18, 1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
"Oh Me! Oh My! Oh You!"
|
Vincent Youmans
|
Ira Gershwin
|
July 25, 1950
|
(duet with Gene Nelson & The Page Cavanaugh Trio) released both as single and on the album Tea for Two
|
"Oh What a Beautiful Dream"
|
Joe Hooven Marilyn Hooven
|
By Dunham
|
May 2, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"Once-a-Year Day"
|
Jerry Ross
|
Richard Adler
|
June 14, 1957
|
(with John Raitt and Ensemble) from the album The Pajama Game
|
"The One I Love (Belongs to Somebody Else)"
|
Isham Jones
|
Gus Kahn
|
November 9, 1951
|
(with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as single and on the album I'll See You in My Dreams
|
"On Moonlight Bay"
|
Percy Wenrich
|
Edward Madden
|
March 23, 1951
|
(with the Norman Luboff Choir) released both as a single and on the album of the same name
|
"On the Street Where You Live"
|
Frederick Loewe
|
Alan Jay Lerner
|
February 11, 1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
"On the Sunny Side of the Street"
|
Jimmy McHugh
|
Dorothy Fields
|
December 20, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"Oops"
|
Harry Warren
|
Johnny Mercer
|
September 12, 1951 TOP 40 HIT
|
(with Paul Weston's orchestra)
|
"Oo-Wee Baby"
|
Barry Mann Cynthia Weil
|
June 12, 1964
|
(with Thomas E. Oliver's orchestra) not released in US until compiled in CD album called The 1960s Singles in 2002
|
"Orange Colored Sky"
|
Milton De Lugg William Stein
|
August 21, 1950 TOP 50 HIT
|
(with the Page Cavanaugh Trio)
|
"Our Day Will Come"
|
Mort Garson
|
Bob Hilliard
|
November 5, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"Over and Over Again"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
1962
|
from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo
|
"Over the Rainbow"
|
Harold Arlen
|
E.Y. Harburg
|
November 5, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
P
|
"Papa, Won't You Dance with Me?"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
September 3, 1947 TOP 20 HIT; BIG SELLER
|
(with Lou Bring orchestra)
|
"The Party's Over"
|
Jule Styne
|
Betty Comden Adolph Green
|
October 30, 1956
|
(with Frank De Vol's orchestra)
|
"Pennies from Heaven"
|
Arthur Johnston
|
Johnny Burke
|
November 12, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"People Will Say We're in Love"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
February 25, 1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
"A Perfect Understanding"
|
Fred Spielman
|
Milton Drake
|
February 7, 1959
|
(with Frank DeVol's orchestra)
|
"Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps"
|
Osvaldo Farrés
|
Spanish: Osvaldo Farrés English: Joe Davis
|
November 5, 1964 FEATURED IN SEVERAL FILMS IN 2007 2008 AND 2009
|
(with Mort Garson's orchestra) from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"Periwinkle Blue"
|
Jerry Livingston
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
May 3, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"Pete"
|
Lanny Grey FIRST SINGLE RELEASE FOR COLUMBIA RECORDS B/W "IT TAKES TIME"
|
February 27, 1947
|
|
"Pillow Talk"
|
Buddy Pepper Inez James
|
July 23, 1959
|
(with Jack Marshall's Orchestra)
|
"Please Don't Eat the Daisies"
|
Joe Lubin
|
January 7, 1960
|
(with Bill Marx's orchestra)
|
"Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone"
|
Sam H. Stept
|
Sidney Clare
|
December 4, 1950
|
(with the Frank Comstock orchestra) released both as single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway
|
"Por Favor"
|
Joe Sherman Noël Regney
|
November 9, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"Powder Your Face with Sunshine"
|
Carmen Lombardo Stanley Rochinski
|
December 28, 1948
|
(duet with Buddy Clark, George Siravo's orchestra)Top 20 hit in 1949
|
"Pretty Baby"
|
Tony Jackson Egbert Van Alstyne
|
Gus Kahn
|
November 12, 1947
|
(with George Siravo's orchestra) Often erroneously shown w/Harry James as bandleader
|
"The Prodigal Son"
|
|
|
July 12, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"Pumpernickel"
|
Sam Coslow
|
September 5, 1950
|
(with Frank Yankovic & his Yanks)
|
"Put 'em in a Box, Tie 'em with a Ribbon"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
November 26, 1947 from ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS
|
(with George Siravo's orchestra)
|
Q
|
"Quicksilver"
|
Irving Taylor George Wyle Eddie Pola
|
October 19, 1949
|
(as "Doris Day with her Country Cousins"); Top 20 Billboard hit
|
"Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars"
|
Antonio Carlos Jobim
|
Gene Lees
|
November 2, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
R
|
"Rainbow's End"
|
Denis King John Junkin
|
May 25, 1964
|
(with Jack Nitsche's orchestra)
|
"Ready, Willing and Able"
|
Floyd Huddleston Dick Gleason Al Rinker
|
October 8, 1954
|
from the album Young at Heart #7 on U.K. charts
|
"A Red Kiss on a Blue Letter"
|
Redd Evans Roger Genger George Lang
|
February 7, 1945
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"Remind Me"
|
Jerome Kern
|
Dorothy Fields
|
November 30, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"Ridin' High"
|
|
|
December 19, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"The River Seine"
|
Guy La Forge
|
(English) Allan Roberts Alan Holt
|
September 14, 1949
|
(with George Siravo orchestra)
|
S
|
"Sam, the Old Accordion Man"
|
Walter Donaldson
|
December 7, 1954
|
from the album Love Me or Leave Me
|
"Save a Little Sunbeam (for a Rainy, Rainy Day)"
|
Irving Gordon
|
November 30, 1949
|
(with Ray Noble orchestra)
|
"Say Something Nice About Me"
|
Sam Stept
|
September 3, 1947
|
|
"Scarlet Ribbons (For Her Hair)"
|
Evelyn Danzig
|
Jack Segal
|
July 12, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"Secret Love"
|
Sammy Fain
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
August 5, 1953
|
released both as a single and on the album, Calamity Jane 1,000,000+ sales; charted at #1 in the U.S. and U.K.; Grammy Hall of Fame Award 1999
|
"Send Me No Flowers"
|
Burt Bacharach |
Hal David
|
September 11, 1964
|
(with Mort Garson's orchestra)
|
"Sentimental Journey"
|
Les Brown Ben Homer
|
Bud Green
|
November 20, 1944
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown) 5,000,000+ sales, #1 on charts
|
September 11, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey Grammy Hall of Fame 1998
|
"Serenade in Blue"
|
Harry Warren
|
Mack Gordon
|
September 15, 1964
|
from the album Doris Day's Sentimental Journey
|
"Seven and a Half Cents"
|
Jerry Ross
|
Richard Adler
|
June 14, 1957
|
(with Jack Straw and Ensemble) from the album The Pajama Game
|
"Shaking the Blues Away"
|
Irving Berlin
|
c. December 1954
|
from the album Love Me Or Leave Me
|
"Shanghai"
|
Milton De Lugg
|
Bob Hilliard
|
May 15, 1951 #7 on Billboard chart; #9 on Cash Box chart
|
(with Norman Luboff Choir, Paul Weston orchestra)
|
"Should I Surrender?"
|
Adam Ross William Landau
|
November 21, 1961
|
(with Frank DeVol's orchestra)
|
"Silver Bells"
|
Jay Livingston
|
Ray Evans
|
September 28, 1950
|
(with George Siravo orchestra)
|
June 17, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"Since I Fell for You"
|
Buddy Johnson
|
November 5, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
"Singin' in the Rain"
|
Nacio Herb Brown
|
Arthur Freed
|
December 20, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"Sleepy Baby"
|
Martin Broones
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
July 7, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
"Sleepy Lagoon"
|
Eric Coates
|
Jack Lawrence
|
June 6, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"Slightly Out of Tune (Desafinado)"
|
Antônio Carlos Jobim
|
Portuguese: Newton Mendonça English: Jon Hendricks Jesse Cavanagh
|
November 2, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"Small Talk"
|
Jerry Ross
|
Richard Adler
|
June 14, 1957
|
(duet with John Raitt) from the album The Pajama Game
|
"Snowfall"
|
Claude Thornhill
|
Ruth Thornhill
|
June 17, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"Snuggled on Your Shoulder"
|
Carmen Lombardo
|
Joe Young
|
May 25, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"Soft as the Starlight"
|
Joe Lubin Jerome Howard
|
August 30, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
"Softly, as I Leave You"
|
Hal Shaper Antonio DeVita Giorgio Calabrese
|
October 29, 1963
|
from the album Love Him
|
"Somebody Loves Me"
|
George Gershwin
|
Buddy DeSylva Ballard McDonald
|
December 4, 1950
|
(with the Frank Comstock orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway
|
"Someday I'll Find You"
|
Noël Coward
|
May 5, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"Someone Else's Roses"
|
Howard Barnes, Harold Fields and Joseph Roncoroni (credited as Milton Carson)
|
December 31, 1947
|
(with George Siravo orchestra) from the film My Dream Is Yours
|
"Someone Like You"
|
Harry Warren
|
Ralph Blane
|
December 31, 1947
|
(with George Siravo orchestra) from the film My Dream Is Yours
|
"Something Wonderful"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
December 22, 1950
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
"Sometimes I'm Happy"
|
Vincent Youmans
|
Irving Caesar
|
June 17, 1949
|
from the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams
|
"The Song is You"
|
Jerome Kern
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
September 17, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
"Soon"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
October 29, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"Sooner or Later"
|
Charles Wolcott
|
Ray Gilbert
|
August 28, 1946
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)Charted at #13
|
"Sorry"
|
Gene DePaul
|
Johnny Mercer
|
November 4, 1966
|
|
"Stardust"
|
Hoagy Carmichael
|
Mitchell Parish
|
1965
|
Unable to locate the original recording date. The song appears on the British import compilation Sentimental Journey, 1965 and the compilation album Love & Magic, 2001
|
"Stars Fell on Alabama"
|
Frank Perkins
|
Mitchell Parish
|
August 27, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
"Stay on the Right Side, Sister"
|
Rube Bloom
|
Ted Koehler
|
November 18, 1954
|
from the album Love Me Or Leave Me
|
"Stay with the Happy People"
|
|
|
December 19, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"Steppin' Out with My Baby"
|
Irving Berlin
|
November 10, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"Street of Dreams"
|
Victor Young
|
Sam M. Lewis
|
May 25, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"Sugarbush"
|
Josef Marais
|
February 7, 1952 TOP TEN CHARTED HIT; #1 ON JUKEBOX HITS; #8 in U.K.
|
(duet with Frankie Laine, with Norman Luboff choir) Based on a traditional Afrikaans song by the name of Suikerbossie 1,000,000+ sales
|
"Summer Has Gone"
|
Gene DiNovi Bill Comstock
|
November 2, 1964
|
from the album Latin for Lovers
|
"The Surrey With the Fringe on Top"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
February 11, 1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
"Swinging on a Star"
|
Jimmy Van Heusen
|
Johnny Burke
|
July 10, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
T
|
"Tacos, Enchiladas and Beans"
|
|
|
November 21, 1947
|
|
"Teacher's Pet"
|
Joe Lubin
|
November 1, 1957 TOP 40 HIT
|
(with Frank De Vol's orchestra)
|
"Tea for Two"
|
Vincent Youmans
|
Irving Caesar
|
July 14, 1950
|
(with Axel Stordahl's orchestra) released both as a single and on
the album Tea for Two;
|
"Tell Me, Tell Me, Dreamface"
|
Duke Ellington |
Don George
|
February 27, 1947
|
|
"Tell Me (Tell Me Why)"
|
Max Kortlander |
J. Will Callahan
|
March 23, 1951
|
(with Paul Weston's orchestra) released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay
|
"Ten Cents A Dance"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
December 30, 1954
|
from the album Love Me Or Leave Me
|
"Ten Thousand Four Hundred And Thirty-Two Sheep"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
October 23, 1950
|
(with David Rose's orchestra)
|
"That Certain Party"
|
Walter Donaldson
|
Gus Kahn
|
October 10, 1948
|
(duet with Buddy Clark)
|
"That Old Black Magic"
|
Harold Arlen
|
Johnny Mercer
|
November 12, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"That Old Feeling"
|
Sammy Fain
|
Lew Brown
|
December 29, 1948
|
from the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams
|
"That's the Way He Does It"
|
Buddy Pepper Inez James
|
September 3, 1947
|
(with Lou Bring orchestra)
|
"There Once Was a Man"
|
Jerry Ross
|
Richard Adler
|
June 14, 1957
|
(duet with John Raitt) from the album The Pajama Game
|
"There's A Rising Moon"
|
Sammy Fain
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
September 24, 1954
|
from the album Young at Heart
|
"There's Good Blues Tonight"
|
Edna Osser Glenn Osser
|
February 25, 1946
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"There's No Business Like Show Business"
|
Irving Berlin
|
1962 Also recorded in 1948 with Frank Sinatra as a duet
|
(duet with Robert Goulet, Franz Allers Orchestra) from the album Annie Get Your Gun
|
"There They Are"
|
Carter Wright Donald Borzage
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
January 21, 1946
|
(with Mort Garson's orchestra)
|
"There Will Never Be Another You"
|
Harry Warren
|
Mack Gordon
|
September 26, 1956
|
from the album Day by Day
|
"They Say It's Wonderful"
|
Irving Berlin
|
February 18, 1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
October 8, 1962
|
(duet with Robert Goulet) from the album Annie Get Your Gun
|
"This Can't Be Love"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
1962
|
from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo
|
"Thoughtless"
|
Carl Lampl
|
Buddy Kaye
|
December 29, 1947
|
(with The Modernaires)
|
"Three Coins in the Fountain"
|
Jule Styne
|
Sammy Cahn
|
October 22, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"Till the End of Time"
|
Buddy Kaye Ted Mossman
|
May 17, 1945
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown) #3 charted hit
|
"Till We Meet Again"
|
Richard Whiting
|
Raymond B. Egan
|
March 23, 1951
|
released both as a single and on the album On Moonlight Bay
|
"Till My Love Comes to Me"
|
Based on Mendelssohn's "On Wings of Song"
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
September 24, 1954
|
from the album Young at Heart
|
"Time to Say Goodnight"
|
John Rotella
|
May 2, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"'Tis Harry I'm Plannin' to Marry"
|
Sammy Fain
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
July 16, 1953
|
from the album, Calamity Jane
|
"Too Marvelous For Words"
|
Richard A. Whiting
|
Johnny Mercer
|
January 25, 1950
|
(with Harry James Quintet) released both as a single and on the album Young Man with a Horn
|
"Toyland"
|
Victor Herbert
|
Glen McDonough
|
June 16, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"Twinkle and Shine"
|
|
|
December 23, 1960
|
from the album Bright and Shiny
|
"Twinkle Lullaby"
|
Joe Lubin
|
August 30, 1963
|
(with Jack Nitsche's orchestra)
|
U
|
"Under a Blanket of Blue"
|
Jerry Livingston
|
Al J. Neiburg Marty Symes
|
August 23, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
V
|
"Very Good Advice"
|
Sammy Fain
|
Bob Hilliard
|
February 28, 1951
|
(with the Four Hits and Leith Stevens's orchestra)
|
"A Very Precious Love"
|
Sammy Fain
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
November 19, 1957
|
(with Frank De Vol's orchestra) Charted at #16 in U.K., 1958
|
"The Very Thought Of You"
|
Ray Noble
|
January 25, 1950
|
(with Harry James and his orchestra) released both as a single and on the album Young Man with a Horn
|
W
|
"Wait Till You See Him"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
December 16, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"Walk with Him"
|
|
|
July 11, 1962
|
from the album You'll Never Walk Alone
|
"The Way You Look Tonight"
|
Jerome Kern
|
Dorothy Fields
|
November 12, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 1)
|
"We'll Be Together Again"
|
Carl T. Fischer
|
Frankie Laine
|
November 5, 1945
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"We'll Love Again"
|
Jay Livingston
|
Ray Evans
|
May 3, 1961 Also featured in the film, THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH (February 24, 1956)
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"What Does a Woman Do?"
|
Allie Wrubel
|
Maxwell Anderson
|
December 22, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
January 7, 1960
|
(with Bill Marx's orchestra)
|
"Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera)"
|
Jay Livingston
|
Ray Evans
|
February 24, 1956
|
(with Frank De Vol's orchestra) 1,000,000+ sales; charted at #1 in the U.K., Australia & France, and #2 in the U.S.; Grammy Hall of Fame 2012
|
July 7, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
|
"What Every Girl Should Know"
|
David Holt
|
Robert Wells
|
December 11, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album of the same name
|
"What's the Use of Wond'rin'?"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
December 11, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
"When I Fall in Love"
|
Victor Young
|
Edward Heyman
|
May 6, 1952 TOP 10 HIT
|
(with Norman Luboff choir, Percy Faith orchestra)
|
"When I Grow Too Old to Dream"
|
Sigmund Romberg
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
May 5, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"When I'm Not Near the Boy I Love"
|
Burton Lane
|
E.Y. Harburg
|
February 11, 1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
"When the Red, Red Robin (Comes Bob, Bob, Bobbin' Along)"
|
Harry M. Woods
|
|
1953/4
|
from the album, The Voice of Your Choice. With Paul Weston and His Orchestra
|
"When You're Smiling"
|
Larry Shay Mark Fisher
|
Joe Goodwin
|
December 17, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
"When Your Lover Has Gone"
|
|
|
December 29, 1948
|
from the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams
|
"White Christmas"
|
Irving Berlin)
|
June 17, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"Who Are We to Say (Obey Your Heart)"
|
Sigmund Romberg
|
Gus Kahn
|
December 16, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"Who Knows What Might Have Been?"
|
Jule Styne
|
Adolph Green Betty Comden
|
November 21, 1961
|
(with Frank DeVol's orchestra)
|
"The Whole World Is Singing My Song"
|
Vic Mizzy
|
Manny Curtis
|
June 20, 1946 TOP 20 HIT
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)Charted at #6
|
"Why Can't I?"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
1962
|
(with Martha Raye) from the film Billy Rose's Jumbo
|
"Why Don't We Do this More Often?"
|
Allie Wrubel
|
Charles Newman
|
November 13, 1958
|
from the album Cuttin' Capers
|
"Winter Wonderland"
|
Felix Bernard
|
Richard B. Smith
|
June 16, 1964
|
from The Doris Day Christmas Album
|
"With a Smile and a Song"
|
Frank Churchill
|
Larry Morey
|
July 7, 1964
|
(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album of the same name
|
"With a Song in My Heart"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Lorenz Hart
|
January 27, 1950 from Top Ten Albums of 1950
|
(with Harry James Quintet) released both as a single and on the album Young Man with a Horn
|
"A Woman's Touch"
|
|
|
July 17, 1953
|
from the album, Calamity Jane
|
"A Wonderful Guy"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
February 18, 1960
|
from the album Show Time
|
"Wonderful One"
|
Ferde Grofé Paul Whiteman
|
Theodora Morse)
|
June 9, 1967
|
from the album The Love Album
|
"Would I Love You, Love You, Love You"
|
Harold Spina
|
Bob Russell
|
December 28, 1950 TOP 10 Billboard Hit
|
(with Harry James and his orchestra)
|
"Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams (And Dream Your Troubles Away)"
|
Harry Barris
|
Billy Moll Ted Koehler
|
August 27, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
Y
|
"Yes"
|
André Previn
|
Dory Langdon Previn
|
November 30, 1961
|
(with the André Previn Orchestra) from the album Duet
|
"You Are My Sunshine"
|
Jimmie Davis Charles Mitchell Paul Rice
|
September 5, 1950
|
(with Frank Yankovic & his Yanks)
|
"You Can Have Him"
|
Irving Berlin
|
May 15, 1949
|
(duet with Dinah Shore, Hugo Winterhalter's orchestra)
|
"You Can't Get A Man with A Gun"
|
Irving Berlin
|
October 8, 1962
|
from the album Annie Get Your Gun
|
"You Can't Have Everything"
|
Harry Revel
|
Mack Gordon
|
December 17, 1959
|
(with Harry Zimmerman's orchestra) from the album What Every Girl Should Know
|
"You Do Something to Me"
|
Cole Porter
|
August 27, 1957
|
from the album Day by Night
|
"You Go to My Head"
|
J. Fred Coots
|
Haven Gillespie
|
March 2, 1949
|
(with George Siravo orchestra) released both as a single and on the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams
|
"You'll Never Know"
|
Harry Warren
|
Mack Gordon
|
November 5, 1957
|
from the album Hooray for Hollywood (Vol. 2)
|
"You'll Never Walk Alone"
|
Richard Rodgers
|
Oscar Hammerstein II
|
July 13, 1962
|
from the album of the same name
|
"You Love Me"
|
Jule Styne |
Sammy Cahn
|
September 13, 1950
|
(with David Rose's orchestra)
|
"You Made Me Love You (I Didn't Want To Do It)"
|
James V. Monaco
|
Joseph McCarthy
|
November 18, 1954
|
from the album Love Me Or Leave Me
|
"You My Love"
|
Jimmy Van Heusen |
Mack Gordon
|
September 24, 1954
|
from the album Young at Heart
|
"You're Getting to Be a Habit with Me"
|
Harry Warren
|
Al Dubin
|
December 4, 1950
|
(with the Frank Comstock orchestra) released both as single and on the album Lullaby of Broadway
|
"You're My Thrill"
|
Jay Gorney
|
Sidney Clare
|
May 13, 1949
|
(with The Mellomen) released both as single and on the album You're My Thrill, later issued on Day Dreams
|
"Your Eyes Have Told Me So"
|
Walter Blaufuss
|
Gustave Kahn Egbert Van Alstyne
|
February 13, 1953
|
from the album By The Light Of The Silvery Moon
|
"You Should Have Told Me"
|
Bobby Barnes Lewis Bellin Redd Evans
|
August 29, 1946
|
(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
|
"You Stepped Out of a Dream"
|
Nacio Herb Brown
|
Gus Kahn
|
May 5, 1961
|
from the album I Have Dreamed
|
"You Was"
|
Sonny Burke
|
Paul Francis Webster
|
December 15, 1948
|
(duet with Buddy Clark, Mitchell Ayres orchestra)
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"You Won't Be Satisfied (Until You Break My Heart)"
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Teddy Powell Larry Stock
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November 5, 1945 #4 HIT OF 1946
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(with Les Brown's Band of Renown)
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Z
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"Zip-a-dee-doo-dah"
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Allie Wrubel
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Ray Gilbert
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July 10, 1964
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(with Jimmy Joyce and the Children's Chorus) from the album With a Smile and a Song
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