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"The Touch of Your Lips" has appeared on the following albums: Chet Baker - The Touch of Your Lips (1979) Tony Bennett – The Tony Bennett/Bill Evans Album (1975); duet with pianist Bill Evans; Pat Boone - The Touch of Your Lips (1964) [5] Nat King Cole – The Touch of Your Lips (1961) Vic Damone - That Towering Feeling! [6] (1956)
The Touch of Your Lips is a 1961 album by Nat King Cole, arranged by Ralph Carmichael. [2] Track listing. The Touch of Your Lips" – 3:52 "I Remember ...
The Globe and Mail wrote that, "with his subtle trumpet and vocal styles, he is one of the great expressionists, an artist whose emotional power exceeds his musical virtuosity."
The Touch of Your Lips is the 23rd studio album by Pat Boone, released in early 1964 on Dot Records. [1] [2] [3] Track listing. Side one; No. Title Writer(s) Length; 1.
"The Touch of Your Lips" alternate take 1 – 2:54 "Some Other Time" alternate take 7 – 4:56 "When in Rome" alternate take 11 – 2:57 "Waltz for Debby" alternate take 8 – 3:50 "The Bad and the Beautiful" alternate take 1 – 2:12 "The Bad and the Beautiful" alternate take 2 – 2:09 "Make Someone Happy" alternate take 5 – 3:54
The Touch of Your Lips (1979) - with Doug Raney, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen; No Problem (1979) - with Duke Jordan; Daybreak (1979) - with Doug Raney, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen; This Is Always (1979 [1982]) - with Doug Raney, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen; Someday My Prince Will Come (1979 [1983]) - with Doug Raney, Niels-Henning ...
The Touch of Your Lips" is a song written by Ray Noble in 1936. The song gave its title to the following albums: The Touch of Your Lips (Chet Baker album), 1979; The Touch of Your Lips (Pat Boone album), 1964; The Touch of Your Lips (Nat King Cole album), 1961
John Vinocur of The New York Times praised the album, saying: [1]. The performances are remarkable because they take in, at the highest level, everything that people said Chet could do – play ballads with almost painful, poetic eloquence – and what many said he could not: blow hard and tough enough so as to make the trumpet sound its essence.