Friday, 23 January 2026

Barry Stanton born 23 January 1941

Barry Stanton (23 January 1941 – 21 January 2018) was a British-Australian rock and roll musician. He performed on pop music programs, Six O'Clock Rock, Bandstand, Johnny O'Keefe Show, Sing Sing Sing,  and Saturday Date. 

Barry John Stanton was born in London on 23 January 1941. The Stanton family—Stella Rose, Carl Leopold, Barry John and Rodney—migrated to Australia in 1948. They settled in the Sydney suburb of Neutral Bay. At the age of 15 Stanton became interested in rock and roll. He left school and worked as apprentice motor mechanic. His early bands included the Boppers and the Bellairs; they played gigs at local dance halls. Stanton provided "some Presley-type singing and guitar-playing." In 1957 he recorded material, which was not released until 1988, issued on his compilation album, 'A Tribute to the King Rare Songs 1957-1965', via Canetoad Records. According to Ainslie Baker of The Australian Women's Weekly, he "has brown eyes, is 6ft. 1in. tall, weighs 13-​1⁄2 stone, likes cars and car-racing, surfing, and football." 

Stanton was talent spotted in 1959 while playing during the interval in between Marlon Brando and James Dean films at Manly's Embassy Theatre, by 2SM radio DJ, Allan Lappan. He was recommended to Johnny O'Keefe who recruited Stanton for a spot on the rocker's TV pop music show, Six O'Clock Rock. He became one of the most popular young male artists of the day. He also appeared regularly on pop, variety TV show, Bandstand. One of the few artists to use his real name, O'Keefe branded him the "Big Boy of Rock" due to his solid physique. 

Stanton signed to O'Keefe and Lee Gordon's label, Leedon Records, in 1960, which issued his debut EP, 'Barry Stanton Sings'. His first single – a cover version of Roy Hamilton's "Don't Let Go" – appeared in April. It was recorded with chorus and orchestra directed by Eddie Cash, Jr. He began touring with other local artists, Digby Richards, Jimmy Little, and Warren Williams. In May to June that year he took part in an interstate tour supporting Johnny O'Keefe and the Dee Jays, Laurel Lea, Booka Hyland, Lonnie Lee, the Sapphires and Ray Hoff. Stanton left the tour in mid-June as he was "too exhausted to sign on for an extra week of engagements." In the following week O'Keefe lost control of his Plymouth Belvedere near Kempsey and was involved in a serious car accident. 

                                   

Stanton's follow-up single, "Don't You Worry 'Bout That", written by O'Keefe, appeared in September 1960. It was well received in most states, reaching #12 on the Sydney music charts. Late in the following year he issued his fourth single, "Beggin's on My Knees", which became his most successful hit when it reached #25 on the national top 40. The track was written by his younger brother, Rod Stanton, who later explained how "One day, strumming on an old guitar given to him by Barry, he asked his brother to have a listen to a fresh composition he was quite happy with. Its potential was immediately recognised by Barry and, perhaps even more importantly, by his producer, O'Keefe." Warren Carr played its ear grabbing tinkling piano. 

Stanton was approached to switch to RCA by New Zealand-born rocker Johnny Devlin, who from late 1963 was the label's Australian A&R manager and house producer. Stanton's first single on the label, "Tribute to the King" was released in 1964. It was written by Devlin as a tribute to Presley, which "consisted of 32 Elvis Presley song titles set to rocking instrumental backing provided by Devlin's backing band The Devils." His next single, "My Little Emmy", which was written by Stanton, was released in July 1965. Stanton undertook interstate tours supporting Billy Thorpe & the Aztecs and Ray Brown & the Whispers. He supported Screaming Lord Sutch's tour in 1964. 

Although only releasing two singles while at RCA, he recorded more material, however after leaving the label in 1966, the recordings were unreleased. According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, "with the lack of success of his RCA sides, Stanton gave up his rock'n'roll career to work as an electrician." In 1974 he resumed his music career to join O'Keefe and fellow 1960s rockers Ray Brown, Lonnie Lee, Jade Hurley, Johnny Devlin, Dinah Lee and Tony Brady as part of a touring ensemble, The Good Old Days of Rock 'n' Roll. The nostalgia circuit was successful with the tour continuing for four years. In 1978 he issued a single, "City of Armidale / Big Front Door", via the Bunyip label. 

In 1981 Raven Records issued a compilation, split album, 'Rock On!', with "most of Stanton's singles as one half" and the rest from fellow rocker, Johnny Rebb. Stanton's early material, including previously unreleased tracks, was issued as a solo compilation album, 'A Tribute to the King Rare Songs 1957-1965', via Canetoad Records. Concert bookings had become rarer, and Stanton returned to working a day job, as a warehouse manager. He periodically played shows until 2006, when he took a break from showbiz to spend time with his grandchildren. After two years, he performed a comeback concert in Melbourne. Stanton died of renal failure on January 21, 2018, two days short of his 77th birthday. 

(Edited from Wikipedia)

 

Thursday, 22 January 2026

Bill Emerson born 22 January 1938

William Hundley Emerson, Jr. (January 22, 1938 – August 21, 2021) was an American five-string banjo player known for being one of the founding members of the original The Country Gentlemen and Emerson & Waldron and considered one of the finest bluegrass banjo players in music history. 

He began playing guitar in 1955 and banjo the following year, which was when he heard a performance by Uncle Bob & the Blue Ridge Partners on a Rockville, MD, radio station. He was so captivated by their sound that he went to the station to meet them, and was asked to join them. A few months later, Emerson joined Buzz Busby & the Bayou Boys. When an auto accident put Busby and some of the bandmembers out of commission, Emerson and bandmate Charlie Waller assembled a new band, the Country Gentlemen, to keep their booking at the Admiral Grill in Bailey's Cross Roads, VA. 

They recorded three singles for Dixie and Starday, including "High Lonesome" b/w "Hey Little Girl." In 1958, Emerson left the Gentlemen to play live gigs with the Stonemans, later playing with Bill Harrell, Jimmy Martin & the Sunny Mountain Boys, and Red Allen & the Kentuckians. In 1963, he appeared on the Jimmy Martin album This World is Not My Home. While playing with Allen, he recorded a few albums as Bill Emerson & His Virginia Mountaineers, including Banjo Pickin' n' Hot Fiddlin' Country Style. 

                                   

In 1965, he left Allen's band and rejoined Jimmy Martin's for two albums. Emerson left again in 1967 and teamed up with Cliff Waldron to form Emerson & Waldron & the Lee Highway Boys. The group recorded three albums for the Rebel label, including Bluegrass Country. He returned to the Country Gentlemen in 1970, playing club dates and recording with them until 1972, when he was hit in the arm during a drive-by shooting as he and the band were leaving the Red Fox Inn in Bethesda, MD. 

He recovered fully and joined the U.S. Navy Band the next year.Emerson's 20-year military stint was spent playing music in Washington, D.C., doing outside session work, and performing with his country/bluegrass band, the Country Current. Beginning in 1988, Emerson recorded two solo albums for Rebel, Home of the Red Fox (1987) and Gold Plated Banjo (1991). He was also honored by Sterling Banjo Works, who issued a Signature Series of banjos ("Bill Emerson Red Fox Model") and gear after him. Emerson released his Reunion album in 1992, which features various lead singers he had worked with over the years, including Jimmy Martin, Charlie Waller, and Tony Rice. 

He finally left the Navy in 1993 and subsequently released a duet album with protégé Wayne Taylor. His recorded output continued with Banjo Man in 1996, and Bill Emerson & the Sweet Dixie Band issued their eponymous Rebel debut in 2007. Emerson and the band returned in January 2010 with Southern (Emerson's sixth album as soloist or bandleader during his half-century career), a 12-track contemporary and traditional bluegrass album on the Rural Rhythm label featuring songs written by the likes of Vince Gill, Chris Hillman, Hazel Dickens, and Marty Stuart. 

Bill Emerson & Sweet Dixie remained a popular bluegrass festival draw as the new millennium's first decade drew to a close. He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 2019. 

Emerson died on August 21, 2021, at the age of 83 from complications from pneumonia. 

Please Note: The bluegrass musician named Bill Emerson is often confused with another country musician named Bill Emerson (known as "Wild Bill Emerson") who was also born in 1938. As a result, bluegrass musician Bill Emerson is frequently incorrectly attributed to songs on various music databases written by Wild Bill Emerson and/or his wife, Martha Jo "Jody" Emerson. 

 (Edited from Rocky52 & Wikipedia)

 


Wednesday, 21 January 2026

Jimmy Wilson born 21 January 1918

Jimmy Wilson (possibly January 21, 1918, 1921 or 1923 – February 5, 1965 or February 24, 1966) was an American West Coast blues singer, best known for his 1953 hit "Tin Pan Alley". 

Details of Wilson's life are sketchy and uncertain. He may have been born Jimmie Ned Wilson in Gibsland, Louisiana in 1918, or (according to other sources) near Lake Charles, Louisiana a few years later. 

Rising Star Gospel Singers

Jimmy Wilson was never interviewed, and the very little known about him comes from the memories of a couple of musicians who worked with him at various times. He started out singing with a gospel quartet, the Pilgrim Travelers in California and toured the West Coast ,but his first recordings were with the Rising Star Gospel Singers by Bob Geddings in 1946. He switched to R&B at the instigation of west coast producer-songwriter Geddins who began to record him in Oakland in 1951. 

Initially Wilson was with Bob Geddins' Cavaliers, but further recordings were made under Wilson's own name, often accompanied by guitarist Lafayette Thomas. Some of the masters were purchased by Aladdin Records which was based in Los Angeles, and Wilson recorded for Aladdin in 1952 before returning to record for Geddins' Big Town Records in 1953. 

                                   

Most of his records sold well locally, without crossing over to the mainstream. The one exception was Jimmy’s ‘signature song’, the original version of the blues standard ‘Tin Pan Alley’ which reached number 10 on the US Billboard R&B chart in 1953 and helped to establish Geddins as a major figure in West Coast blues. In 1954 he had a local on the subsidiary Rhythm label with “Strangest Blues.” 

Wilson failed to capitalize on the success of "Tin Pan Alley". Jimmy moved away from North California and continued recording in Louisiana, where he recorded for Goldband Records. His 1958 song "Please Accept My Love" was later recorded by B. B. King and Elton Anderson. His last recordings were for Duke Records in Houston in 1961. Wilson became an alcoholic and died on arrival at Parkland Hospital in Dallas, Texas on February 24, 1966. Virtually forgotten by the record-buying public, he was buried at Lincoln Memorial Cemetery in Dallas. 

(Edited from Wikipedia, Wirz’ American Music, Jasmine & Acrobat liner notes)

Tuesday, 20 January 2026

Lucille Dumont born 20 January 1919

Lucille Dumont (January 20, 1919 – July 29, 2016) known as Quebec’s grande dame of chanson, was a pioneering Canadian singer, radio and television host, and vocal educator who played a pivotal role in popularizing the chanson style in Quebec, adapting French art-song traditions to local themes and promoting emerging Quebecois songwriters throughout her seven-decade career. 

Outside the realm of folk music, most popular singers in Quebec at the time imitated American or French singers, and did French or American repertoire. During the first part of her career, Ms. Dumont followed suit, singing chansons that were popular in Paris, and modelling her performance on French stars such as Lucienne Boyer and Lys Gauty. Like them, she sang with expressive diction, a quick vibrato and a melting, lyrical style that could make a simple phrase feel like a caress. 

She was born Lucelle Dumont in Montreal's Centre-Sud, a district which, then as now, knew more than its share of poverty. She was just 16 when she made her broadcast debut. Under her mentor, Léo Le Sieur, an organist and composer who guided her into broadcasting, Ms. Dumont quickly became a star in Quebec. On October 16, 1935, at age 16, Dumont made her professional debut. She sang and acted as host on numerous programs on Montreal radio station CKAC, an early media-convergence play by La Presse. She often performed with the station's own orchestra. Her talents were also showcased through a variety of shows at Radio-Canada, with titles such as Variétés Françaises, Sur les boulevards and Le moulin qui jazz, the title of which riffed on a 1934 hit song for Ms. Gauty. On stage, Ms. Dumont starred in musical revues at Montreal's Monument-National and other theatres. 

                                  

In 1945, she became the first performer of Insensiblement, a chanson by French songwriter Paul Misraki that was later recorded by Jean Sablon, Charles Aznavour and jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt. Signing with RCA Victor in 1947, she released dozens of recordings, including Quebec-themed hits like René Tournier's Mon Saint-Laurent, si grand, si grand and her signature song Le ciel se marie avec la mer by Jacques Blanchet, for which she won first prize at the 1957 Concours de la chanson canadienne. 

In 1952, she appeared on Radio-Canada's first TV broadcast, on a program called Le Café des Artistes. A series of regular performing and hosting gigs on TV followed. For four years in the late 1950s, her weekly variety show À la Romance directly followed the Saturday night hockey game, whose colour commentator was her sportscaster husband, Jean-Maurice Bailly. By that time, she had honed her TV performance skills to a captivating degree. She coddled each song with her warm, expressive voice, and beguiled the camera with a smile or a wink in mid-phrase.

At about the same time, she was turning her attention to Quebec chanson, giving a platform in Quebec and abroad to the work of young talents such as Gilles Vigneault, Jacques Blanchet and Stéphane Venne. In 1957, her performance of Blanchet's poetic Le ciel se marie avec la mer won first prize at the Concours de la chanson canadienne. It became her signature song. 

Some of Ms. Dumont's Quebec chansons made proud reference to the province and Montreal in their lyrics and titles. She had lasting success with René Tournier's Mon Saint-Laurent, si grand, si grand and Blanchet's Au parc Lafontaine, a tribute to the historic park in Montreal's Le Plateau-Mont-Royal district. Both were waltzes performed with lavish orchestral arrangements. 

Quebec chanson, with its sophisticated themes and melodic finesse, stood apart from the wave of youth-oriented, beat-heavy music reaching the province from the United States and England in the early 1960s. But chanson as a Quebec creation served as a point of cultural pride, and had an effect on the character of the province's popular music that lingers to this day. Ms. Dumont remained a fixture on Radio-Canada till the mid-seventies, performing and hosting French stars such as Mr. Aznavour and Jacques Brel. In 1968, she opened a studio, Atelier de la Chanson, and continued teaching into old age. 

Known as the "Grande Dame de la Chanson," she performed with a young Céline Dion and Jean-Pierre Ferland on Quebec television in 1989, spanning more than half a century from her debut. She was regularly feted in Quebec as a national treasure. She retired in 1999 and became an Officer of the Order of Canada, and entered l'Ordre national du Québec in 2001. Though she was mainly an interpreter of song, she received a legacy award from the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2006. She died in Montreal on July 29, 2016  at the age of 97. 

(The Globe and Mail & Wikipedia)

 

Monday, 19 January 2026

Horace Parlan born 19 January 1931

Horace Parlan (January 19, 1931 – February 23, 2017) was an American pianist and composer known for working in the hard bop and post-bop styles of jazz. In addition to his work as a bandleader Parlan was known for his contributions to the Charles Mingus recordings Mingus Ah Um and Blues & Roots. 

He was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States and was adopted by a minister and his family and was exposed to church music throughout his youth. Parlan was stricken with polio, resulting in the partial crippling of his right hand.

His first piano teacher was not sympathetic, but after seeing classical pianist Vladimir Horowitz in concert in Pittsburgh, Parlan was drawn back to music. He was about 12 when he began to study with James Miller, who also taught another budding Pittsburgh jazz pianist, Ahmad Jamal. Miller encouraged Parlan to develop his left hand, which led to his idiosyncratic style, with his right hand often pointed at a sharp angle toward the keyboard. 

                                   

Parlan studied at the University of Pittsburgh, with an eye toward becoming a lawyer, before deciding to pursue a career in music.  Between 1952 and 1957, he worked in Washington, D.C., with Sonny Stitt. From 1957 to 1959, Parlan was part of a band led by Mingus, the mercurial bassist and composer then at the height of his creativity. He appeared on two of Mingus’s landmark albums, “Blues and Roots” and “Mingus Ah Um,” both from 1959. On the latter recording, Parlan’s driving piano helped some of Mingus’s best-known tunes, including “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat,” “Fables of Faubus,” “Boogie Stop Shuffle” and “Better Git It in Your Soul.” 

Between 1960 and 1963 he recorded seven albums for the Blue Note label, including “Up & Down” and “Speakin’ My Piece,” with such bandmates as guitarist Grant Green and saxophonists Stanley Turrentine and Booker Ervin. Also during the early 1960s, Parlan was in demand as a top sideman .He played with Booker Ervin in 1960 and 1961, then in the Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis-Johnny Griffin quintet in 1962. From 1963 to 1966 Parlan played with Rahsaan Roland Kirk. "The work situation in New York in the late ‘60s, for me at least, was not optimal," said the soft-spoken Parlan in an interview. "I was doing a lot of commercial jobs playing in East Side clubs. I wasn't all that happy." 

As musical tastes changed, he found it harder to make a living in jazz and moved in 1972 to Copenhagen, Denmark, where Gordon, Ben Webster and other expatriate jazz stars then lived. Parlan worked primarily in Europe for the rest of his career. He later settled in the small village of Rude in southern Zealand. In 1974, he completed a State Department tour of Africa with Hal Singer. In 1977, he made a well-received recording of spirituals with saxophonist Archie Shepp, “Goin’ Home,” and the two made several appearances over the next few years at jazz clubs and colleges in the United States. The duo later recorded two more albums. 

While living in Denmark, Parlan frequently recorded for the Copenhagen-based SteepleChase label and became a more prolific composer. He became a Danish citizen in 1995. Filmmaker Don McGlynn made a documentary about Parlan in 2000. That year he also received the 2000 Ben Webster Prize awarded by the Ben Webster Foundation. Describing the obstacles he overcame to become a pianist, Parlan told Jazz Times magazine in 2001: “I was not equipped to speak musically in the manner of [Art] Tatum or [Oscar] Peterson or any of the pianists I admire. I had to find a groove of my own.” 

His final recording, “My Little Brown Book,” appeared in 2007. He lived for years in the countryside with his wife, Norma Parlan. He died February 23, 2017, at a nursing home in Naestved, Denmark, at the age of 86. He had been suffering from multiple ailments, including diabetes and failing eyesight. 

(Edited from Billboard Obit, Wikipedia, AllMusic and All About Jazz) 

 

Sunday, 18 January 2026

Dodo Greene born 18 January 1924

Dodo Greene, (born Dorthea Hawkins; January 18, 1924 - July 21, 2006) was an American jazz vocalist who performed in clubs and venues in Buffalo, and along the East Coast and Chicago, before releasing two albums in the 1960s, and touring internationally. 

A native of Buffalo, New York, Greene was exposed to music through family gatherings and local events, where the rhythmic sounds of jazz and rhythm and blues permeated neighborhood life. She began singing at age 7 or 8 when she was chosen for recurrent appearances on the Buster Brown Shoes Amateur Hour radio program, where she frequently won prizes including shoes for her family.  She continued to sing throughout her teens, although she was planning a career in medicine. Her first big break arrived when she filled in for a sick vocalist in Cozy Cole's band. He asked her to join his group, but she refused. Eventually, she decided to pursue a career in music and began singing regularly at venues along the East Coast, as well as Chicago. 

She got her first big singing job at the Club Moon-Glow, a nightclub at Michigan and William Street. She also sang at other local clubs on the east side of Buffalo and the Cold Springs district, including The Musician's Club, The Buffalo Club, the Pine Grill, Mandy's and the Little Harlem.Slowly, she built up a following among audiences and fellow vocalists like Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, and Dinah Washington, and was able to play venues in London and Germany. In 1959 she moved to New York City to perform with Cab Calloway's revue at the Winter Garden Theatre. She became known at that time as the "buxom blues singer". It was also about this time that she perfected a Louie Armstrong imitation, including his trademark throaty growl and hanky and adopted her trademark bleached blonde hairstyle. 

                                    

Dodo Greene's debut studio album, Ain't What You Do, was released in 1960 by Time Records, marking her entry into professional recording. Recorded in New York City in January 1959, the album features Greene's warm, R&B-inflected vocals backed by a robust ensemble including trumpeter Burt Collins, trombonist Slide Hampton, pianist Ray Bryant, and drummer Frank Dunlop on select tracks. Spanning 12 songs, it draws on jazz and pop standards with themes of romance and melancholy, highlighted by interpretations of "Manhattan," "Black Coffee," and "Baby, Won't You Please Come Home." 

Greene's sophomore effort, My Hour of Need, issued in 1962 by Blue Note Records, stands as her most prominent release and the label's first album featuring a female vocalist under exclusive contract. Produced by Blue Note co-founder Alfred Lion and engineered by Rudy Van Gelder, the sessions occurred across multiple dates in 1962 at Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, involving luminaries like tenor saxophonist Ike Quebec, guitarist Grant Green, organist Sir Charles Thompson, and drummers Billy Higgins and Al Harewood. The album's 12 tracks predominantly cover blues-tinged standards and ballads evoking emotional vulnerability and resilience. 

While My Hour of Need achieved modest commercial traction through associated singles like "You Are My Sunshine" b/w "Little Things Mean a Lot," it did not yield major chart success, reflecting Blue Note's primary focus on instrumental jazz during the era. Unreleased outtakes from September and November 1962 sessions, featuring additional collaborators like Dionne Warwick on tambourine, were later compiled on a 1996 CD reissue by Blue Note, expanding the album to 20 tracks. 

Greene faded away from the spotlight in the years following the release of her lone Blue Note album. There is no apparent record of her recording again. In 1997 Ms. Greene was honored in Buffalo's Hall of Fame, along with music great Harold Arlen.  She was a woman of great talent, boundless energy and an indomitable spirit who continued to "wow" her audiences mostly at the Anchor Bar in Buffalo, New York, right up until her death in her home on July 21, 2006 after a long illness. 

 (Edited from AllMusic, Grokipedia & Michigan Street Buffalo)

 

Saturday, 17 January 2026

Charlene Bartley born circa 1922

Charlene Bartley (born circa 1922 - ?) was a big band and jazz singer who was based in Boston and was a regular entertainer in Boston hotels that hosted live music in their lounges in the 40's and 50's. 

The exact birth date of Charlene Bartley is not known but possibly prior to 1922 as although there is no information regarding her early life; her trail starts off on March 3, 1938, when she married a truck driver Raymond Bartley. They had a daughter named Joyce Lee who was 8-years-old when they divorced in 1946. At that time it was reported that Ms. Bartley was 26-years-old, so either she married quite young or she shaved a few years off her age. If the latter is the case, she would have been born earlier than 1922. It is not known whether Charlene was her birth name, but Bartley was her married name. Of course, she could have gotten married again and no longer went by the name Bartley. 

What is known is that as a singer, she hailed from Los Angeles, and the Boston bandleader Al Donahue initially brought her back East. Donahue hired Bartley in California in late 1947. They recorded a few sides on the Tune-Disk label just before the second recording ban took effect. One of them, “My Old Fashioned Gal,” ended up on the Boston Crystal-Tone label (Crystal-Tone 523) in 1948. Donahue was back in Boston, with Bartley singing, in 1949. 

Bartley toured with Donahue in the early 1950s, but when he relocated to the Sunshine State permanently, she gave up the road and settled in Boston although during 1954 she appeared for one appearance on the Al Donahue TV show. He held an annual residence at the Statler Hotel, and Bartley sang with him there through 1957. She also recorded a single on his Aldon Records label in 1956, but by that time she was on the staff at Boston’s WHDH-AM. There she met guitarist Don Alessi, one of the Park Squares, a vocal-and-instrumental group then providing music on both radio and television broadcasts. 

                                   

The Park Squares were real pros, playing everything from The New England Farm and Food Show in the afternoon, to John McLellan’s Jazz Scene in the evening. One of their daily radio shows was One to Two, with Charlene Bartley as the staff singer. That’s when she came to the attention of someone from A&R at RCA, and an album was in the works. The Weekend of a Private Secretary, was released in 1957. It’s the story in song of a woman who weekends in Havana, finds romance, and returns home sadder but wiser. 

RCA brought some of its leading talent to the project, with four songs arranged by Tito Puente and performed by his orchestra. Saxophonist Hal McKusick arranged four more, and performed them with a small group. The duo of Alessi and bassist Milt Hinton performed the final four.  Alessi, in fact, played on all twelve numbers. The title tune, backed by Puente’s orchestra, has a catchy rhythm to go with Johnny Mercer’s lyrics, but for the most part Bartley sings ballads, including “I’ve Got a Crush on You,” “I Don’t Stand a Ghost of a Chance,” and “Memories of You.” 

The record did not create much excitement. Wrote Billboard’s reviewer: “Charlene Bartley has a sweet, fresh vocal sound but doesn’t do much with it on this package of standards.” Her singing was warm, and free from embellishment, but that didn’t attract attention in 1957. The jazz-pop continuum was teeming with singers… Teddi King, Kathy Barr, Lucy Ann Polk, Helen Grayco, Audrey Morris, Jaye P. Morgan, Ann Gilbert… all worthy voices, and all with LPs out in 1957. Bartley’s record just didn’t stand out from the crowd. 

Then the Bartley story took a mysterious turn, she dropped from sight after a visit to Los Angeles the summer of 1958, until she was reported in the December 31, 1961 edition of “The Boston Globe” that she was performing at the Meadows in Framingham. There have also been unconfirmed reports of her living in the area in the late 1980s after which there is no information regarding what became of her.

(Edited mainly from an article by Richard Vacca & IMDb)