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Kay Armen Sings to No One but You

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I had a request from long-time reader Ravel for something by the pop singer/actor Kay Armen. I hope he (and you) will find this 10-inch LP from 1955 to be appealing. Armen had a lovely alto voice, with good intonation, excellent diction and an enveloping warmth, all on ample display here.

Kay Armen
M-G-M records couldn't make up its corporate mind about the title of the LP. Called Sings to No One but You on the cover, the label tags it as Kay Armen Sings and the notes on the back cover claims it is By Candlelight.

By whatever name, the album's theme is actually the melodies of M-G-M tunesmith Nicholas Brodszky, who wrote all the songs here, even though that fact goes unmentioned on the cover. Seven of the eight tunes were composed for M-G-M films, four with lyricist Sammy Cahn. The only exception is "I Just Love You," which he did with studio producer Joe Pasternak as a present for the latter's wife.

Nicholas Brodszky plays
for Mario Lanza
Brodszky was mainly active in the 1950s, passing away at a relatively young age in 1958. He is best known for the Mario Lanza hits "Be My Love" and "Because You're Mine," both of which show up here. I am more fond of "Wonder Why," which Jane Powell introduced in Rich, Young and Pretty, and "No One But You," which was sung by the relatively obscure Carlos Thompson in Flame and the Flesh. The soundtracks to Rich, Young and Prettyand Flame and the Fleshhave appeared on this blog in years past, and are available via the preceding links. Flame and the Flesh, a rare EP, is newly remastered.

Armen was not a particularly prolific recording artist. Her first recordings were on Decca in 1943, then a few with Guy Lombardo in 1945. She also did various sides for RCA, King, London and Majestic. Her only LPs seem to be this one, an inspirational LP for M-G-M and a Tin Pan Alley LP for Decca, which I have if there is interest.

These days Armen is perhaps most noted for her role in Hit the Deck, which is plugged on the back cover of this LP. (She played Vic Damone's mother, even though she was only 12 years older than he was.) As a bonus, I've included her two songs from the film, "Ciribiribin," taken from the soundtrack LP, and "Hallelujah," from the soundtrack itself (the LP's version cuts Armen's chorus). Among others, you will hear Damone and Tony Martin on these songs. Hit the Deck was Armen's only film in the 50s, but she was on TV as a guest singer and actor both, and also appeared in a few later films.

The cover of this LP is a particularly striking example of the 50s idea of romance. A couple smooching on the floor with their M-G-M records, he in a suit, her in pearls and a voluminous skirt, with a four-times life-size Armen monitoring the proceedings from the wall. I could not like it more!

Hit the Deck's"Ciribiribin" sing: Vic Damone, Jane Powell, Tony Martin, Kay Armen,
Russ Tamblyn, Debbie Reynolds

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