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    Torch Songs for Valentine’s Day

    It’s been impossible to miss the heart-filled displays in the stores, signaling the arrival of Valentine’s Day tomorrow. I’ve always wondered why love should be singled out for celebration on…

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    By Tom Schnabel • Feb 13, 2018 • 2 min read

    It’s been impossible to miss the heart-filled displays in the stores, signaling the arrival of Valentine’s Day tomorrow. I’ve always wondered why love should be singled out for celebration on a designated day of the year (as opposed to year-round). It got me thinking how tough it must be to have suffered a recent heartbreak and be faced with reminders of romantic love everywhere, and that led me to this playlist of some of jazz music’s greatest torch songs. Surely there are many others outside the jazz arena, but these are the A-list jazz classics that give me goose bumps when I hear them. They are poignant reminders of love and love lost.

    1. Billie Holiday

      You’ve Changed”: We start with two of the most devastating torch songs I can think of – this track by Billie Holiday and the next one by Frank Sinatra. Holiday recorded this song when she was sick and dying. She couldn’t even make the recording date, so arranger

      Ray Ellis had to record all the instrumental tracks first. Holiday recorded her vocals later at Columbia studios and released her final studio album,

      Lady in Satin

    2. Frank Sinatra

      In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning”: A classic recorded after Sinatra’s tumultuous breakup with the actress

      Ava Gardner, who was more than a match for Old Blue Eyes. Everyone who has been through a rough breakup and can’t sleep can relate to this song. Who can you call at 4 a.m. while lying awake in bed?

    3. Nina Simone

      You Can Have Him”: Nina Simone’s songs are where you go for a good cry. One of her most indelible songs, this track was recorded live at New York City’s Town Hall in September 1959. I get teary every time I hear this song, with its irony-filled lyrics.

    1. Nancy Wilson

      Guess Who I Saw Today”: Another masterpiece of irony. A heartbreaking song about the discovery, by chance, of a cheating spouse.

    2. Chet Baker

      I Get Along Without You Very Well (Except Sometimes)”: No torch song playlist would be complete without one by Chet Baker, and this is from his must-have album

      The Best of Chet Baker Sings.

    3. Chris Connor

      Cottage for Sale”: While not as well-known as some other female jazz singers, Chris Conner has always been one of my favorites.

    1. Johnny Hartman

      Down In the Depths”: I discovered this Johnny Hartman song long after his better-known

      Coltrane duet album. What a superb statement of irony—drinking champagne alone in a New York penthouse. I love this Impulse album

      Unforgettable

    2. Julie London

      Cry Me A River”: This 1955 song is probably London’s signature song. Straddling the divide between pop and jazz, London’s sultry treatment of songs like this one made her a star.

    3. Little Jimmy Scott

      The Loneliest House On the Street”: Little Jimmy Scott is a singer’s singer, and his unusual-sounding voice (caused by a hormone deficiency) and delivery influenced many other vocalists.

    • https://images.ctfassets.net/2658fe8gbo8o/AvYox6VuEgcxpd20Xo9d3/769bca4fbf97bf022190f4813812c1e2/new-default.jpg?h=250

      Tom Schnabel

      host of KCRW’s Rhythm Planet

      Music NewsRhythm PlanetWorld Music