Susannah McCorkle lyrics
Artist · 127 018 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Most Requested Songs
2001 · album
Hearts and Minds
2000 · album
From Broken Hearts To The Blue Skies
1999 · album
Someone To Watch Over Me
1998 · album
The Songs Of Johnny Mercer
1996 · album
Easy To Love: The Songs Of Cole Porter
1996 · album
From Bessie To Brazil
1993 · album
I'll Take Romance
1992 · album
Sabia
1990 · album
No More Blues
1989 · album
Dream
1987 · album
How Do You Keep The Music Playing?
1985 · album
Thanks For The Memory: Songs Of Leo Robin
1984 · album
The People That You Never Get To Love
1981 · album
Adeus - The Berlin Concert
2015 · album
The Music of Harry Warren
2008 · album
The Beginning 1975
2002 · album
Ballad Essentials : Susannah McCorkle
2002 · compilation
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Biography
One of the finest interpreters of lyrics active in the jazz world during the 1980s and '90s, Susannah McCorkle did not improvise all that much, but she brought the proper emotional intensity to the words she sang; a lyricist's dream. She moved to England in 1971 where she worked with Dick Sudhalter and Keith Ingham, among others, performing at concerts with such visiting Americans as Bobby Hackett, Ben Webster, and Dexter Gordon. McCorkle sang at the Riverboat jazz room in Manhattan during 1975 (gaining a lot of attention) and recorded two albums in England (tributes to Harry Warren and Johnny Mercer) that were released domestically by Inner City. By 1980, she was back in the U.S., recording a Yip Harburg set and a fourth album for Inner City. After that label folded, McCorkle switched over to Pausa but by the late '80s was recording regularly for Concord. She expanded her pre-bop repertoire to include Brazilian songs and blues and, by the mid-'90s, Susannah McCorkle was at the top of her field. Tragically, career disappointments exacerbated her chronic depression (a condition she kept well-hidden), resulting in her suicide in May of 2001 in New York City. ~ Scott Yanow