Felicia Sanders (c. 1922 – February 7, 1975) was a singer and musician of traditional pop music.
Sanders was born Felice Schwartz in Mount Vernon, New
York. At the University of Southern California she studied merchandising. She
married Michael Snider (who was in the Army), and had a son,
Jefferson, with him. They eventually divorced, both having part-time custody of their child. During World War II, with a son and a husband, she "decided to give singing a try."
Jefferson, with him. They eventually divorced, both having part-time custody of their child. During World War II, with a son and a husband, she "decided to give singing a try."
In 1950 she returned to singing in a nightclub in
Hollywood, Café Gala. She was heard there by Benny Carter, who thought enough
of her talent to recommend her to Mitch Miller, Columbia Records' artist and
repertory director. She was picked in 1953 by Percy Faith, Columbia's biggest
orchestra leader, to sing vocals on a song he was recording, taken from the
film Moulin Rouge—a biographical film about Toulouse-Lautrec.
"The Song from Moulin Rouge" was recorded on
January 22, 1953, as the B-side of a recording of "Swedish Rhapsody".
It was Sanders' second record, and it was released by Columbia with the credits shown as "Percy Faith and his Orchestra featuring Felicia Sanders." She had been paid only union scale and her name appeared below Faith's in small letters, but she had a success. It was released by Columbia Records in both 78 and 45 rpm single formats and first reached the Billboard chart on March 28, 1953 lasting 24 weeks on the chart, peaking at No. 1 and spending ten weeks at the top. This version finished as the No. 1 song for 1953, according to Billboard.
It was Sanders' second record, and it was released by Columbia with the credits shown as "Percy Faith and his Orchestra featuring Felicia Sanders." She had been paid only union scale and her name appeared below Faith's in small letters, but she had a success. It was released by Columbia Records in both 78 and 45 rpm single formats and first reached the Billboard chart on March 28, 1953 lasting 24 weeks on the chart, peaking at No. 1 and spending ten weeks at the top. This version finished as the No. 1 song for 1953, according to Billboard.
Just before the record was released she was hired by New
York's famous Blue Angel nightclub, and she played there for a long time, being
the first singer to perform the song "In Other Words (Fly Me to the
Moon)" although she did not record it until several other singers had done
so. In 1955, Sanders released her first Columbia album, Felicia Sanders at the
Blue Angel. When she recorded "In Other Words" at Decca Recording
studio, it was backed with "Summer Love" (composed by Victor Young)
in 1959. During the 1960s she sang frequently at The Bon Soir cabaret on West
8th Street.
After her marriage to Snider, Sanders married musician
Irving Joseph. They formed Special Edition Records, with the first release
featuring Sanders' singing. During the 1960s she sang frequently at The Bon
Soir cabaret on West 8th Street. Miss Sanders, a tiny black haired bundle of
vivacity, had bit of humour in her act at times. She would sing “Sunrise,
Sunset” from “Fiddler on the Roof” with expressive shading and follow it with
what she called “a really traditional Yiddish song.”
With husband Mr. Joseph at the piano, his face straight,
she then would belt out “Hello, Dolly!” in
Yiddish. On other occasions it would be the same song in French. Many critics remarked that her work was a compound of acting and singing. On one occasion, when Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, dedicated method actors, heard her, they exclaimed, “You're a method singer!” While Miss Sanders did not deny the intended compliment, she had her own idea, and expressed it: “It's not the brains you reach. It's the heart.”Mitch Miller kept finding other songs to have her sing, but only one other scored among the Top 30: "Blue Star", based on the theme from a well-known television series, Medic,
Yiddish. On other occasions it would be the same song in French. Many critics remarked that her work was a compound of acting and singing. On one occasion, when Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, dedicated method actors, heard her, they exclaimed, “You're a method singer!” While Miss Sanders did not deny the intended compliment, she had her own idea, and expressed it: “It's not the brains you reach. It's the heart.”Mitch Miller kept finding other songs to have her sing, but only one other scored among the Top 30: "Blue Star", based on the theme from a well-known television series, Medic,
Sanders continued to perform in various night clubs until
the early 1970’s, consisting of La Ronde, The Living Room, Rainbow Grill, The Persian
Room, The Maramor and Mister Kelly’s to name but a few.
Felicia Sanders died on February 7, 1975 at her home at
845 West End Avenue, Manhattan, from throat cancer at the age of 53. (Edited mainly from Wikipedia & New York Times)
5 comments:
For “Felicia Sanders – The Song From Moulin Rouge
& Felicia At The Blue Angel” go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/10806405/Felicia_Sanders_-__Song_from_Moulin_Rouge.rar.html
1. The Song From Moulin Rouge 3:11
2. May Not Remember Your Name 3:01
3. How Did He Look 2:52
4. Embrasse 3:22
5. Melancolie 3:14
6. Ma Curly Headed Babby 3:18
7. Love Affair 2:51
8. Jole John 2:33
9. My Love Belongs To You 2:52
10. How Long Has This Been Going On! 3:02
11. Blue Star 2:36
12. My Love's A Gentle Man 2:49
13. All At Once 2:45
14. Wanting And Loving 3:05
15. Surrender To Me 2:49
16. This Is Real 2:35
Felicia Sanders At The Blue Angel (Tracks 17-28)
17. Come Rain Or Come Shine 2:50
18. Speaking Of Love 2:06
19. If I Love Again 2:47
20. It Might As Well Be Spring 2:39
21. I Wanna Be Loved 2:51
22. Baby - Did You Hear? 2:29
23. Something Cool 2:39
24. My Funny Valentine 2:08
25. You Make Me Feel So Young 1:32
26. (Ah, The Apple Trees) When The World Was Young 3:12
27. Old Devil Moon 2:39
28. The Song From Moulin Rouge 2:42
A Cinderella story unfolded in 1953 when a thirty-one-year-old singer was hired to appear on a single by Percy Faith, one of Columbia Records' star maestros. Felicia Sanders was assigned a lilting waltz from Moulin Rouge, a film bio of Toulouse-Lautrec. "The Song from Moulin Rouge (Where Is Your Heart?)" held the number-one position for ten weeks. Sanders was given her own record deal and went on to appear at the Blue Angel, New York's chicest cabaret. She performed regularly on national TV and sang for long stretches at the Bon Soir, the Greenwich Village club that helped launch Barbra Streisand.
But Sanders is all but forgotten today and this collection of her work on Columbia (1953-1955) is her long-overdue first CD. This Sepia collection is completed with her first LP, Felicia Sanders at the Blue Angel. Though a simulated live album with canned applause, it captures much of her onstage magic. Sanders made only four more albums in a career that dwindled by the late '60s. But she's ripe for rediscovery, and this CD is the welcome first step.
Wonderful tribute!
Hi Bob,
Is it possible to get a re-upload of this Felicia Sanders album? It would be much appreciated.
Regards,
Ray
Hello RayKay, Here's Felicia....
https://www.upload.ee/files/15489642/FeliciaSanders_MRBlA.rar.html
Hi Bob,
Just thought to check this and discovered you had re-uploaded. Thank you, much appreciated.
Ray
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