Artist's albums
Centenary Celebrations
1997 · album
The Very Thought Of You
1996 · album
The Very Thought Of You
1990 · album
Big Bands of the 30's
1984 · album
In the Clouds - Big Band Classics
2023 · album
Al Bowlly Sings Again
2022 · album
Only Forever
2022 · EP
With All My Heart
2021 · album
Memories of Al Bowlly
2021 · album
Love Is the Sweetest Thing: Magic Of
2020 · album
The Echo Of A Song
2018 · album
Make Yourself A Happiness Pie
2018 · album
When It's Sunset On The Nile
2018 · album
Brighter than the Sun
2018 · album
Up in the Clouds
2018 · album
Al Bowlly - ХX Век Ретропанорама
2013 · album
Dancing With Tears In My Eyes (1926-1930)
2011 · album
Wherever You Are (1932-1933)
2011 · album
Wanderer
2010 · album
Diamond Master Series - Al Bowlly
2007 · album
Great British Bands / Ray Noble & His Orchestra
2007 · album
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Biography
The most popular vocalist in Britain during the 1930s, Al Bowlly showcased a range of material unsurpassed by any contemporary other than Bing Crosby. He was also a true international recording artist: born in Mozambique to Greek and Lebanese parents, he was raised in Johannesburg, but gained his musical experience singing for a dance band led by Jimmy Liquime in India and Singapore during the mid-'20s. Just one year after his 1927 debut recording date in Berlin, Bowlly arrived in London for the first time, as part of Fred Elizalde's orchestra. That year, "If I Had You" became one of the first popular songs by an English jazz band to become renowned in America as well, and Bowlly had gone out on his own by the dawn of the '30s. During the next three years, he recorded over 500 songs and appeared with orchestras led by Ray Noble and Lew Stone. A visit to New York in 1934 with Noble resulted in more success; he appeared at the head of an orchestra handpicked for him and Noble by Glenn Miller (the band included Claude Thornhill, Charlie Spivak, and Bud Freeman, among others). During the mid-'30s, such songs as "Blue Moon," "Easy to Love," "I've Got You Under My Skin," and "My Melancholy Baby" were sizable American successes -- so much so that Bowlly gained his own radio series on NBC and traveled to Hollywood to film The Big Broadcast of 1936, which also starred one of his biggest competitors, Bing Crosby. He was back in England that same year, appearing with his own band, the Radio City Rhythm Makers, as well as the orchestras of Sydney Lipton, Geraldo and Ken Johnson. Partnered with Jimmy Messini, Bowlly also branched out onto the London stage during the early '40s with an act called Radio Stars with Two Guitars. It was his last venture before his death in 1941, the victim of a German bomb exploded outside his apartment. Fifty years after his death, a British musical named Melancholy Baby toured the country with much success. ~ John Bush, Rovi