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Bing: A Musical Autobiography

Bing: A Musical Autobiography
Bingmusicbio.jpg
Box set by Bing Crosby
Released 1954 (1954)
Recorded April 21–June 19, 1954
Genre Vocal
Length 3:43:20
Label Decca
Producer Buddy Cole
Bing Crosby chronology
Selections from White Christmas
(1954)Selections from White Christmas1954
Bing: A Musical Autobiography
(1954)
The Country Girl / Little Boy Lost
(1955)The Country Girl / Little Boy Lost1955
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars link

Bing: A Musical Autobiography was Bing Crosby's fourth Decca vinyl LP, recorded and released in 1954.

Ready to retire by 1954, Crosby assembled Buddy Cole and his Trio, a small group formed from members of the John Scott Trotter Orchestra, and re-recorded many of his early hits between April and June 1954. The Decca masters were used for his hits, starting with the 1938 recording of "Small Fry" Most of the new recordings were done at the American Legion Hall in Palm Springs, California.

Crosby's memoir, Call Me Lucky, was published in June 1953 by Simon & Schuster. It was written with Pete Martin.

The album was released as both a set of five LPs and a set of seventeen 45s. Both box sets came in a hinged box with a jeweler's lock and key and included a twenty-four page discography. Starting in 1958, Decca released the LPs separately.

The LPs were issued as automatic couplings which would enable the five LPs to be played on an autochanger record player in chronological sequence. For instance, within album set DX-151, LP no. DL 8072 contained sides 1 and 10, DL 8073 sides 2 and 9, DL 8074 sides 3 and 8, DL 8075 sides 4 and 7, DL 8076 sides 5 and 6.

The Musical Autobiography tracks were reissued as a four-CD set in Japan in 1992 without change from the original five LPs (MCA (Japan). Avid Entertainment in the UK released a four disc set in 2005 but with the addition of soundtrack and film promotional material from the 1930s.

In an enthusiastic review of the set, John S. Wilson wrote in The New York Times, "The first half of the program in which Crosby talks about his early days and sings his early hits is an unalloyed joy, a field day for nostalgians. In view of complaints that have been made off and on for the past fifteen years that the Crosby voice was gone, that he no longer had the old touch, it is a particular pleasure to hear these early songs recorded within the past year, sung with all the old Crosby ease and charm...This is an exceptional collection of recordings, the summation of a landmark in American popular music and well worth the asking price."

At Allmusic John Bush called A Musical Autobiography "the most laborious exercise in Crosby's entire career, narrating a career history and re-recording dozens of songs." It was also issued to commemorate Decca's 20th anniversary.


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