Betty Carter

Bild Quelle:


  • jazz
  • female vocalists
  • jazz vocal
  • vocal jazz
  • soul
Betty Carter (May 16, 1929 – September 26, 1998) was a prominent American jazz singer who was renowned for her improvisational technique and idiosyncratic vocal style. Carter expanded the role of the vocalist in jazz, to a full, improvising member of the band. Although her voice was not as admired by the public as such vocalists as Sarah Vaughan or Ella Fitzgerald, many consider her to have exercised mastery of the human voice previously unheard in jazz. Carmen McRae once claimed that "there's really only one jazz singer - only one: Betty Carter."[1]

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Songs

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    Thou Swell

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    Tight

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    Two Cigarettes in the Dark

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    Useless Landscape

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    Wagon Wheels

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    We Tried

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    What a Little Moonlight Can Do

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    What Is It

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    What Is This Tune?

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    What's New

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    What's New?

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    What's the Use of Wond'rin

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    What's the Use of Wond'rin'

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    When I Fall in Love

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    When It's Sleepy Time Down South

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    Who What Why Where When

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    Why Him

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    You Go to My Head

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    You're a Sweetheart

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    You're Driving Me Crazy

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    You're Driving Me Crazy (What Did I Do)

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    You're Driving Me Crazy (What Did I Do?)

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    You're Getting to Be a Habit With Me

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    You're Mine, Too


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